Health and Illness, the Self and the Body

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapterAcademic

Abstract

This chapter emphasizes issues of health and illness during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. It explores the entanglements of body, mind and self and the most important theories of their historical development. It starts by discussing the relationship between these three elements in humoral theory and its medical successors. In addition to an overview of the most important developments in (medical) thinking about the body and illness, the chapter focuses on the ‘modern self’, its definitions and historical debates about its existence. The chapter particularly discusses Michel Foucault’s notion of ‘technologies of the self’, which constituted a shift towards historicizing the concept of the self, and the way in which cultural historians have elaborated on this theme, connecting it with material practices that have shaped the self in daily life.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationThe Routledge Companion to Cultural History in the Western World
Subtitle of host publicationPart 3: The Western World and the Global Challenge, from 1750 to the present
EditorsAlessandro Arcangeli, Jörg Rogge, Hannu Salmi
PublisherRoutledge
Pages406-419
Volume3
ISBN (Electronic)9781003080206
ISBN (Print)9781138649460
Publication statusPublished - 2020

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