Researchers, including Rahul Singh (left), in the Daniell lab’s greenhouse where the production of clinical grade transgenic lettuce occurs.
(Image: Henry Daniell)
2 min. read
A monk’s testimony on an amulet to repel disease and demonic temptations. Astronomical and astrological tables that can help decipher human activities and how the moon and planets affect them. Notes on the medical applications of alchemy.
These are not average college textbooks, but for Elly Truitt, associate professor of history & sociology of science in Penn’s School of Arts & Sciences, they are priceless primary sources that students had the opportunity to examine on a recent trip to Lea Library in Van Pelt. The rare manuscripts provide an invaluable window into the intriguing—and sometimes strange—evolution of medicine.
Truitt’s course, Medicine, Magic, and Miracles, focuses on the medieval period, incorporating materials from Indonesia to England in a quest to explore a wide range of topics. These include rationalities for healing practices, views of human anatomy, institutions of medicine, and the practitioners who people turned to for medical care—be they midwives, snake handlers, saints, or surgeons. Students investigate these topics through the lenses of intellectual, cultural, and social history, as well as the life sciences.
The course’s curriculum spans myriad periods and regions, from ancient Greece to the Roman Empire to the Islamic world. Students interrogate foundational questions: How were people pursuing their own healthcare and that of their family members? What did the medical marketplace look like?
“Hippocrates, and later Galen in Rome, fleshed out naturalistic ideas about the causes of disease, as opposed to supernatural causes,” says Truitt. “And then that early framework gets digested and added to over time.”
Read more at Omnia.
Blake Cole
Alex Schein
Researchers, including Rahul Singh (left), in the Daniell lab’s greenhouse where the production of clinical grade transgenic lettuce occurs.
(Image: Henry Daniell)
Image: Sciepro/Science Photo Library via Getty Images
In honor of Valentine's Day, and as a way of fostering community in her Shakespeare in Love course, Becky Friedman took her students to the University Club for lunch one class period. They talked about the movie "Shakespeare in Love," as part of a broader conversation on how Shakespeare's works are adapted.
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