Disease of Virgins

Helen King’s Disease of Virgins: Green Sickness, Chlorosis and the Problems of Puberty. New York: Routledge, 2004.

Description from Amazon.com: “When does a young girl’s behaviour become a disease?
In sixteenth-century Europe, the disease of virgins, or green sickness, was seen as a common disorder affecting young unmarried girls. Its symptoms included weakness, dietary disturbance, lack of menstruation and most significantly, a change in skin colour. Understanding of the condition turned puberty and virginity into medical problems, and proposed to cure them by bloodletting, diet, exercise, and marriage.
Helen King examines the origins and history of the disease, from its roots in the classical tradition to its extraordinary survival into the 1920s, despite changes in how the mechanisms of puberty and menstruation were understood, and enormous shifts in medical theories and technologies. From menstrual disturbance to eating disorders, from liver disease to blood disorder, the disease of virgins has been adjusted throughout its history to fit medical fashions. However, little changed in the underlying ideas about the female body, and the need to regulate the sexuality of young women.
This compelling study poses a number of questions about the nature of disease itself and the relationship between illness, body image and what we should call ‘normal’ behavior.”

Published in:  on June 18, 2007 at 8:42 pm Comments (1)

CFP:Women Writing 1550-1750 (Revisited)

In 1999 scholars from Australia, New Zealand, and further afield gathered together in Melbourne for a two day conference devoted to writing by early modern women. This new conference offers a chance to reassess the field almost a decade later, and to mull over and celebrate the significant and growing body of scholarship devoted to early modern women’s writing.

Proposals are invited for a 20 minute paper, a panel, or a round table discussion. We welcome contributions from all fields of study, and papers or round table proposals from postgraduate students are particularly welcome. The conference will be held in Melbourne, Australia, at the city campus of La Trobe University, on Saturday and Sunday, 26-27 January, 2008.

Please send proposals by 17 November to Paul Salzman, English Program, La Trobe University, Australia, 3086; email: P.Salzman_at_latrobe.edu.au.

Published in:  on June 16, 2007 at 3:48 pm Leave a Comment

Call for Papers: Renaissance In-Betweenness (Updated)

Not exactly specifically about e.m. women, but looks interesting and relevant:

Pacific Northwest Renaissance Society
Annual Conference
Vancouver, BC
3-5 April 2008
The Annual Conference of the Pacific Northwest Renaissance Society (PNRS) will be held from April 3-5, 2008 in downtown Vancouver at the Hyatt Regency (room rates: $141.00 CDN per night, single or double). The theme for this year’s conference is ???Renaissance In-Betweenness,??? and our plenary speakers will be Fran Dolan (University of California, Davis) and Elizabeth Harvey (University of Toronto).
We invite papers, panels, discussion groups, and workshops that examine Renaissance engagements with various transitional figures and cultural artifacts. The PNRS program coincides with the annual convention of the Medieval Academy at the Hyatt Regency, and both organizations hope that conference participants will engage in fruitful conversation across a range of historical fields and disciplines.
We invite proposals in the following areas for the 2008 conference:
Liminal Spaces: urban liberties, walls, doors, thresholds, docks, rivers and hedges
Figures of the In-Between: stage devils, panders, bawds, pages, hermaphrodites, messengers, angels, scribes, the noble savage, typesetters, publishers, usurers, translators and children
Religious *via media*
Generic Conventions and Hybrid Genres: *in medias res*, interludes, scene changes (jigs and dumbshows) and tragicomedy
Species Boundaries: integuments (skin, bark, pelt) and hybrid creatures
Mixed governments and *interregna*
Arcane Knowledge: zodiacal cusps, equinoxes and alchemy
Suspended States: sleep, trances and exorcisms
Objects of Exchange: letters, coins, gifts, rings, jewelry, potions, clothes and fabric
Places of Exchange: The Royal Exchange and pawnshops
Periodization and Historiography
Please email individual abstracts (250-words) or panel / workshop proposals to Tiffany Alkan (talkan_at_sfu.ca) and Vin Nardizzi (nardizzi_at_interchange.ubc.ca) by September 1, 2007. Update: Please email individual abstracts (250-words) or panel / workshop proposals to Tiffany Alkan (talkan_at_sfu.ca) and Vin Nardizzi (nardizzi_at_interchange.ubc.ca) by October 1, 2007.

Published in:  on at 3:42 pm Leave a Comment