00988nam 2200325Ia 450 99639255050331620221102113706.0(CKB)3360000000358226(EEBO)2248534181(OCoLC)226857130(EXLCZ)99336000000035822620080501d1588 uy 0engurbn#|||a|bb|A sonnet of triumph to England[electronic resource] [London? s.n.ca. 1588]1 leaf ([1] p.)Fragment: clipping of a sonnet from an unidentified work.Reproduction of original in: British Library.eebo-0018SonnetsEarly works to 1800Armada, 1588, in literatureEarly works to 1800SonnetsArmada, 1588, in literatureUMIUMIBOOK996392550503316A sonnet of triumph to England2405122UNISA02562nam 2200409Ka 450 99668308150331620251221102333.03-11-165511-33-11-165413-3(CKB)40898898600041(ODN)ODN0012423423(EXLCZ)994089889860004120251103d2025 uy 0engurcn|---|||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierBetween cure and control Doctors, convicts and slaves in tuscan and papal galleys (16th-18th centuries). /Benedetta ChizzoliniLaVergne De Gruyter20251 online resourceVigilanzkulturen / Cultures of Vigilance,16.Title from eBook information screen..3-11-165289-0 Since antiquity, doctors have always been required to be "vigilant" (i.e., extremely attentive), particularly when it comes to any symptoms exhibited and/or complained of by the patient. As outlined in the Hippocratic Oath since antiquity, a doctor's primary mission is to ensure the patient's well-being and recovery, irrespective of their social status. However, loyalty to the patient was explicitly subordinated whenever the patient performed an action deemed suspicious or even detrimental to society's best interests. The goal of this book is, therefore, to delve deeper into the multivalent role and attitude of physicians and surgeons as "experts" in how to interpret symptoms, and how this, in turn, influenced their relationship with their patients, especially when the latter were considered to be "dangerous individuals". This analysis does not seek to further explore Foucault's concept of the "disciplinary" nature of medicine, but rather uses it as a starting point for analyzing the complex and, so to speak, "ambiguous" nature of the doctor-patient relationship in the early modern period, one which oscillated between cooperation and conflict. To deepen these aspects, this analysis will consider the role and tasks of a figure often neglected by historiography: the galley doctor.NonfictionOverDriveHistoryOverDriveMulti-CulturalOverDriveNonfiction.History.Multi-Cultural.HIS010000HIS028040HIS037040bisacshChizzolini Benedetta1856434BOOK996683081503316Between cure and control4455444UNISA