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Immaculate Forms

Uncovering the History of Women’s Bodies

Front cover of the book 'Immaculate Forms'. It is black with blue, yellow and white text and an illustration of female organs including the uterus and ovaries entangled with flowers and leaves.

Journey into the complex medical and religious history of women’s bodies from classical Greece to the modern day.

Throughout history, religious scholars, medical men and – occasionally – women themselves, have moulded thought on what ‘makes’ a woman. She has been called the weaker sex, the fairer sex, the purer sex, among many other monikers. Often she has been defined simply as ’Not a Man’.

Today we are more aware than ever of the complex relationship between our bodies and our identities. But contrary to what some may believe, what makes a woman is a question that has always been open-ended.

‘Immaculate Forms’ examines all the ways in which medicine and religion have played a gatekeeping role over women’s organs. It explores how the womb was seen as both the most miraculous organ in the body and as a sewer; uncovers breasts’ legacies as maternal or sexual organs – or both; probes the mystery of the disappearing hymen, and asks, did the clitoris need to be discovered at all?

Date published
Format
Hardback
Extent
448 pages
ISBN
9781782836346

About the author

Helen King

Helen King is Professor Emerita of Classical Studies at the Open University. She is a historian of medicine and the body, and has held visiting posts at Gustavus Adolphus College, Minnesota, the Peninsula Medical School, and the universities of Vienna, Texas, Notre Dame and British Columbia. She is also an elected member of the General Synod of the Church of England, where she is vice-chair of the Gender and Sexuality Group. Since her first monograph, ‘Hippocrates’ Woman: Reading the female body in ancient Greece’ (1988), including her latest release ‘Immaculate Forms’, she has published on aspects of gynaecology and obstetrics from classical Greece to the 19th century.