Book Review: Imagining Chinese Medicine edited by Vivienne Lo and Penelope Barrett

Autor: Miranda Brown
Rok vydání: 2019
Předmět:
Zdroj: Journal of Medieval Worlds. 1:121-124
ISSN: 2574-3988
1570-1484
DOI: 10.1525/jmw.2019.100008
Popis: Vivienne Lo and Penelope Barrett, eds. Imagining Chinese Medicine , Brill, 2018. Pp. xxii, 519, + 339 plates. $144; ISBN 1570-1484; 978-90-04-35511-1. It would be impossible to do justice to Imagining Chinese Medicine . The editors, Vivienne Lo and Penelope Barrett, have united scholars from Asia, Europe, and North America to provide the first sustained look at the intersection of visual culture and healing in China. By visual culture, I am referring to a wide variety of material related to the body: drawings, diagrams, color illustrations, advertisements, photographs, and cartoons, to name but a few. This volume is thus a formidable undertaking and reflects more than a decade of collaborative work. The 35 essays and two general introductions are intentionally wide-ranging. The editors have adopted a broad understanding of both China and medicine. “China” refers not only to the imagination of a state centered in the Yellow River Valley, but also a geographic mass that incorporated people of different ethnicities, religious, and linguistic persuasions. By “medicine,” they mean the multiplicity of strategies that people have used to understand and cure the broken human (or animal) body, as well as to promote vitality and to preserve health. The essays thus consider not only practitioners of the learned classical tradition, but also religious healers, veterinarians, Daoist practitioners, and adherents of sexual cultivation. The essays also span many centuries, mediums, and languages, from the Shuangbaoshan figurines and Mawangdui illustrations of the Han dynasty (206 BC–220 CE), …
Databáze: OpenAIRE