Literature DB >> 29030783

The Head, the Heart, and Hysteria in Jeanne Flore's Tales and Trials of Love (c. 1542).

Kelly Digby Peebles1.   

Abstract

This essay examines a challenge to common literary representations of female mental illness in the Early Modern period-the hysterical woman-in a collection of French short stories contemporary to Vesalius's De Fabrica: Jeanne Flore's Tales and Trials of Love (1542). Jeanne Flore's tales depict several mentally disturbed female protagonists, young women prone to paroxysms of madness and self-mutilation. This study maintains that while Tales and Trials of Love superficially participates in the literary tradition that grew out of those accepted social and medical beliefs, it also questions the long-accepted paradigm of female hysteria and points to a shift in the socio-medical climate. Jeanne Flore's fictional narratives suggest that mental illness no longer consists in the realignment of a uterine imbalance, but rather in the telling of personal stories, a precursor to psychoanalysis and narrative medicine.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Ambroise Paré; Early Modern; France; Hysteria; Illness narrative; Jeanne Flore; Narrative medicine; Sixteenth century

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29030783     DOI: 10.1007/s10912-017-9482-0

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Med Humanit        ISSN: 1041-3545


  2 in total

1.  Medical men, women of letters, and treatments for eighteenth-century hysteria.

Authors:  Heather Meek
Journal:  J Med Humanit       Date:  2013-03

2.  Women and hysteria in the history of mental health.

Authors:  Cecilia Tasca; Mariangela Rapetti; Mauro Giovanni Carta; Bianca Fadda
Journal:  Clin Pract Epidemiol Ment Health       Date:  2012-10-19
  2 in total

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