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Baptism Through Incision

The Postmortem Cesarean Operation in the Spanish Empire

«

Baptism Through Incision offer[s] a varied, rich perspective on the ways in which print culture, pickled with the ideologies of patriarchy, white supremacy, and empire, has determined women’s bodies as sites of contention across space and time.”

—Kathleen Alves Eighteenth-Century Studies

»

In 1786, Guatemalan priest Pedro Jose de Arrese published a work instructing readers on their duty to perform the cesarean operation on the bodies of recently deceased pregnant women in order to extract the fetus while it was still alive. Les mer

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In 1786, Guatemalan priest Pedro Jose de Arrese published a work instructing readers on their duty to perform the cesarean operation on the bodies of recently deceased pregnant women in order to extract the fetus while it was still alive. Although the fetus's long-term survival was desired, the overarching goal was to cleanse the unborn child of original sin and ensure its place in heaven. Baptism Through Incision presents Arrese's complete treatise-translated here into English for the first time-with a critical introduction and excerpts from related primary source texts.

Inspired by priests' writings published in Spain and Sicily beginning in the mid-eighteenth century, Arrese and writers like him in Peru, Mexico, Alta California, Guatemala, and the Philippines penned local medico-religious manuals and guides for performing the operation and baptism. Comparing these texts to one another and placing them in dialogue with archival cases and print culture references, this book traces the genealogy of the postmortem cesarean operation throughout the Spanish Empire and reconstructs the transatlantic circulation of obstetrical and scientific knowledge around childbirth and reproduction. In doing so, it shows that knowledge about cesarean operations and fetal baptism intersected with local beliefs and quickly became part of the new ideas and scientific-medical advancements circulating broadly among transatlantic Enlightenment cultures.

A valuable resource for scholars and students of colonial Latin American history, the history of medicine, and the history of women, reproduction, and childbirth, Baptism Through Incision includes translated excerpts of works by Spanish surgeon Jaime Alcala y Martinez, Mexican physician Ignacio Segura, and Peruvian friar Francisco Gonzalez Laguna, as well as late colonial Guatemalan instructions, and newspaper articles published in the Gazeta de Mexico, the Gazeta de Guatemala, and the Mercurio Peruano.

Detaljer

Forlag
Pennsylvania State University Press
Innbinding
Paperback
Språk
Engelsk
ISBN
9780271086071
Utgivelsesår
2020
Format
22 x 14 cm

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«

Baptism Through Incision offer[s] a varied, rich perspective on the ways in which print culture, pickled with the ideologies of patriarchy, white supremacy, and empire, has determined women’s bodies as sites of contention across space and time.”

—Kathleen Alves Eighteenth-Century Studies

»

«

“This illuminating volume should encourage readers to revisit assumptions about rigid medical specialties and academic disciplines centered on the study of the human person. We are challenged to rethink the rise of the modern medical profession and the role of religious people, worldviews, and institutions in it.”

—Paul Ramírez,author of Enlightened Immunity: Mexico’s Experiments with Disease Prevention in the Age of Reason

»

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