Leah Astbury
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‘Ordering the infant’
Caring for newborns in early modern England

There have been several important studies about the bodily experience of pregnancy in early modern Europe. However, the infant, its body and health, have been entirely absent. This chapter addresses these absences by showing how babies were medically unique, demanded their own specific care, and how this changed over time after birth. Understanding the ways in which the infant body was readied for later life, and the role that Non-Naturals played in preventative health care, is important not just to the study of childbirth and parturition, but also to deciphering the ways early modern people thought about well-being. The chapter also draws on a group of sources which have been termed 'life-writing', that is, family correspondence, diaries and journals, which allow the historian to access the ways in which prescription and practice interacted.

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Conserving health in early modern culture

Bodies and environments in Italy and England

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