Medical Misinformation in Early Modern Germany examines how doctors, writers, and printers in sixteenth-century Germany responded to the rapid expansion of print and its implications for medical knowledge. The spread of printed texts generated widespread suspicion about print’s reliability as a conduit of information and led writers to reflect on questions of audience, vernacularity, and medical authority in their responses to disease. The book investigates literary texts alongside popular vernacular medical pamphlets on the major epidemic diseases of the period––plague, syphilis, and the English sweating sickness––to reveal a widespread concern with the impact of printed texts on public health. During the 1529 outbreak of the English sweating sickness, this concern culminated in writers’ use of a “rhetoric of virality,” explicitly comparing the circulation of texts to the spread of disease, as they confronted the parallel contagions of disease and information.
Sifting through plague pamphlets, treatises on syphilis or ‘the sweat,’ and works on uroscopy and botany, Hutchinson uncovers the origins of our modern anxieties over medical misinformation—not in the dark corners of the internet, but among early modern German readers and medical authors in the very cities where print was born in Europe. […] Precise and persuasive, Medical Misinformation challenges scholars to rethink the relationship between print, authority, and knowledge in early modern Germany.
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Pathologies of Information in Early Modern Germany
Chapter One: Plague for a Popular Audience: Suspicions of Print in Late Fifteenth-Century Germany
Chapter Two: The French Disease and the Guaiac Cure: Medical Authority in Hutten and Paracelsus
Chapter Three: The English Sweating Sickness and the Rhetoric of Virality
Chapter Four: The Apparatus of Virality: The Sweating Cure and the Reformation
Chapter Five: Printing Quackery
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index
CHRISTOPHER HUTCHINSON is an assistant professor of German in the Department of Modern Languages at the University of Mississippi. His research interests include book history, the history of disease, and the popularization of scientific discourses in literature. He has published articles in The German Quarterly and Seminar.
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