Humors_Bibliography
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The first three sources are good sources and well written.
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Nutton, Vivian. "Humoralism." In Companion Encyclopedia of the History of Medicine, edited by W. F. Bynum and R. Porter, vol. 1, 281-291. New York: Routledge, 1997.Ê Much of it is viewable in GoogleBooks: 101 generic pharmacy
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Bragg, Melvyn. The Four Humours. Audio. London: BBC, 2007. http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00p693b - broadcasts
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Arikha, Noga. Passions and Tempers: A History of the Humours. New York: HarperCollins, 2008.Ê Some is viewable in GoogleBooks: Proventil inhaler cost without insurance
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The following sources can be found in JSTOR in the library databases.
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Arikha, Noga. "Opaque Humors, Enlightened Emotions, and the Transparent Mind." RES: Anthropology and Aesthetics, no. 51 (2007): 175-182.Ê This looks good and relatively short.
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Babb, Lawrence. "[Review of Humors and Shakespear's Characters by Draper]." Modern Language Notes 62, no. 1 (1947): 56-57.
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Boylan, Michael. "Galen's Conception Theory." Journal of the History of Biology 19, no. 1 (1986): 47-77.
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________. "Galen: On Blood, the Pulse, and the Arteries." Journal of the History of Biology 40, no. 2 (2007): 207-230.
ÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊ This essay examines several important issues regarding Galen's depiction of the physiology of the arteries. In the process some of Galen's supporting doctrines on the blood and pulse will also be discussed in the context of a coherent scientific explanation. It will be the contention of this essay that though Galen may often have a polemical goal in mind, he correctly identifies the important and complex role of the arteries in human biological systems.
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Burton, R. The Anatomy of Melancholy, by Democritus junior.Ê This book is available in several editions in GoogleBooks.Ê It's quite long, so just look at a few sections.
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Camden, Carroll. "[Review of Humors and Shakespear's Characters by Draper]." The Journal of English and Germanic Philology 45, no. 2 (1946): 230-232.
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Draper, J. W. The Humors & Shakespeare's characters Duke University publications: AMS Press, 1970.Ê This may be in the library.???
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Ellis-Fermor, Una. "[Review of Humors and Shakespear's Characters by Draper]." The Review of English Studies 22, no. 87 (1946): 234-235.
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Evans, Elizabeth C. "Galen the Physician as Physiognomist." Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association 76 (1945): 287-298.
ÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊ Galen's interest in the theories of the physiognomists may well have been awakened during his residence as a student of medicine at Smyrna, the center for the New Sophistic, among whose leaders, Polemo, the rhetor and physiognomist, had died shortly before Galen's arrival there. The basis of Galen's approach to the pseudo-science of physiognomy lay in the doctrine of the humours. The work of Galen that may be described as a kind of small handbook on physiognomy is entitled, Biblion oti tais tou swmatos krasesin ai ths yuxhs dunameis epontai. This book contains his most significant ideas on the subject. As he draws widely on earlier authors, especially Plato, Aristotle, and Hippocrates, the discussion is essentially eclectic.
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Foster, George M. "On the Origin of Humoral Medicine in Latin America." Medical Anthropology Quarterly 1, no. 4 (1987): 355-393.
ÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊ For the past half-century humoral medicine has been recognized by anthropologists to be the most important and widespread ethnomedical system in Latin America. While most scholars believe this system is largely a simplified folk variant of classical Greek and Persian humoral pathology, a small minority--particularly Audrey Butt Colson and Alfredo López Austin--argues for a New World origin. In this paper the author supports the former hypothesis by tracing the well-documented history of classical medicine from Greece and Persia to Latin America, where it was disseminated via formal medical education, hospitals and missionary orders, home medical guides and pharmacies. The fallacies in the arguments of Colson and López Austin are also pointed out.
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Longrigg, James. "Review of Galen on Bloodletting." The Classical Review 38, no. 1 (1988): 19-21.
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Narveson, Kate. "Flesh, Excrement, Humors, Nothing: The Body in Early Stuart Devotional Discourse." Studies in Philology 96, no. 3 (1999): 313-333.
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Rocca, Julius. "[Review of Galen's On the Properties of Foodstuffs]." Early Science and Medicine 10, no. 1 (2005): 107-109.
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Thorndike, Lynn. "De Complexionibus." Isis 49, no. 4 (1958): 398-408.
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Wright, Charles D. "Melancholy Duffy and Sanguine Sinico: Humors in "A Painful Case"." James Joyce Quarterly 3, no. 3 (1966): 171-181.
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