Female madness between mythical and medical tradition
Resumen
The aim of this article is to analyze how female madness is placed between mythical and medical tradition. Medical sources recognize and treat mental illness, the etiology of which is sought in a physical place of the body and always associated with the functioning of the uterus, so much so that it is perceived as an object of integration into society. According to the doctors of the Corpus Hippocraticum, an interaction between body and psyche generates psychic affections, that is signs of a biological imbalance. The pathologies of the uterus can be solved with sexual activity and with pregnancy: an example can be found in Girls, the Hippocratic treatise examined. The mythical sources foresee an ethical sanction that leads to considering madness as an object of segregation and isolation. In this regard, three myths are examined: Io in Aeschylus’ Prometheus Bound, Phaedra in Euripides’ Hippolytus and Agave in Euripides’ Bacchae. In each case, the madness of these three women is caused by a deity. Although the characters concerned are innocent, their insanity causes a violation of ethical values. A particular case is the myth of the Proetides, in which the young women unleash divine wrath and the consequent punishment. Proetus’s daughters are healed and, finally, through marriage, they respect the representations and beliefs relating to the role of young women within Greek society.
Descargas
Citas
General Bibliography
V. Andò, 1990, “La verginità come follia: il Perì partheníon ippocratico”, Quaderni storici 75, pp. 715-737.
V. Andò, 2003, “La follia femminile nella Grecia classica tra testi medici e poesia tragica”, Genesis 2.1, pp. 17-46.
V. Andò, 2007, “Psyche e malattie psichiche nella prima medicina greca”, in Gli irraggiungibili confini. Percorsi della psiche nell’età della Grecia classica, R. Bruschi (ed), Pisa, pp. 103-129.
M. Bettini, 2015, Il grande racconto dei miti classici, Bologna.
J.-B. Bonnard, 2013, “Corps masculins et corps féminins chez les médecins grecs”, Clio. Femmes, genre, histoire 37, pp. 21-39.
C. Calame, 1977, Les choeurs de jeunes filles en Grèce archaïque, Roma.
J. A. Clua Serena, 2010, El rostre de la Medusa. Manual de Mitologia grega en els seus textos literaris, Lleida (trad. it. Il volto di Medusa. Manuale di Mitologia greca, in press.).
D. Cairns, 2005, “Myth and the Polis in Bacchylides’ Eleventh Ode”, The Journal of Hellenic Studies 125, pp. 35-50.
E. De Martino, 1961, La terra del rimorso, Milano.
M. Detienne, 1981, L’invention de la mythologie, Paris (trad. it. Torino 2000).
G. Devereux, 1970a, Essais d’ethnopsychiatrie générale, Paris.
G. Devereux, 1970b, “The psychotherapy scene in Euripides’ Bacchae”, The Journal of Hellenic Studies 90, pp. 35-48.
M. Dillon, 2002, Girls and Women in Classical Greek Religion, London - New York.
J. Dumortier, 1975, Le vocabulaire médical d’Eschyle et les écrits hippocra-tiques, Paris.
L. Faranda, 1996, Dimore del corpo. Profili dell’identità femminile nella Grecia classica, Roma.
D. Fausti, 2019, “La vista degli occhi e la vista dell’intelletto. I modi e il lessico dell’indagine medica nel Corpus Hippocraticum”, in I nomi del male e i segni dell’eredità. Pensare, nominare e curare la malattia «geneti-ca» dai Greci a noi, M. Capocci, M. Cilione and F. Giorgianni (eds), Bo-logna, pp. 219-223.
D. Fausti, 2020, “La botanica medica di età imperiale. Piante narcotiche dal quarto libro di Dioscoride”, in Περὶ φυτῶν. Trattati greci di botanica in Occidente e in Oriente¸ M.F. Ferrini and G. Giglioni (eds), Macerata, pp. 43-72.
D. Fausti, 2021, “L’eredità di Ippocrate nella farmacologia. I diversi approcci nella medicina di età imperiale”, in Ippocrate e gli altri, D. Manetti, L. Perilli and A. Roselli (eds), Roma, pp. 363-382.
A. Ferrari, 1999, Dizionario di mitologia greca e latina, Torino.
M. Foucault, 1984, Histoire de la sexualité: L’usage des plaisirs, II, Paris.
G. Guidorizzi, 1995, “La follia delle donne”, in Vicende e figure femminili in Grecia e a Roma. Atti del convegno (Pesaro, 28-30 aprile 1994), R. Raffaelli and R.M. Danese (eds), Ancona, pp. 171-183.
G. Guidorizzi, 2010, Ai confini dell’anima. I Greci e la follia, Milano.
H. Jeanmaire, 1951, Dionysos. Histoire du culte de Bacchus, Paris.
H. King, 1998, Hippocrates’ Woman: Reading the Female Body in Ancient Greece, London.
J. Larson, 2001, Greek Nymphs. Myth, Cult, Lore, Oxford - New York.
M. Lentano, 2018, Fedra. L’insana passione, Milano.
P. Manuli, 1980, “Fisiologia e patologia del femminile negli scritti ippocratici dell’antica ginecologia greca”, in Hippocratica. Actes du Colloque hippo-cratique, (Paris, 4-9 septembre 1978), M.D. Grmek (ed), Paris, pp. 393-408.
F. Marzari, 2010, “Paradigmi di follia e lussuria virginale in Grecia antica: le Pretidi tra tradizione mitica e medica”, I quaderni del ramo d’oro on-line 3, pp. 47-74.
C. Montepaone, 1986, “L’apologia di Alexidamos. ‘L’avventura del cavaliere’”, Metis 1, pp. 219-235.
J. R. Pinault, 1992, “The medical case for virginity in the early second cen-tury CE: Soranus of Ephesus, Gynecology 1.32”, Helios 19, pp. 123-139.
N. Robertson, 1983, “Greek Ritual Begging in Aid of Women’s Fertility and Childbirth”, Transactions of the American Philological Association 113, pp. 143-169.
R. Seaford, 1988, “The Eleventh Ode of Bacchylides: Hera, Artemis, and the absence of Dionysos”, Journal of Hellenic Studies 108, pp. 118-136.
G. Sissa, 1987, Le corps virginal. La virginité en Grèce ancienne, Paris.
Reference Editions for the cited texts
Hippocrates, Oeuvres complètes d’Hippocrate, VIII, edited and translated by Émile Littré (Paris 1853, rist. anast. 1962).
Hippocrates, “Sui disturbi virginali”, Galenos 1, pp. 15-59, with translation and commentary by Alessandro Lami (Pisa-Roma 2007).
Hippocrates, Anatomy, Nature of Bones, Heart, Eight Months’ Child, Coan Prenotions, Crises, Critical Days, Superfetation, Girls, Excision of the Fe-tus, and Sight, edited and translated by Paul Potter (Cambridge 2010).
Las obras que se publican en esta revista están sujetas a los siguientes términos:
1. El Servicio de Publicaciones de la Universidad de Murcia (la editorial) conserva los derechos patrimoniales (copyright) de las obras publicadas, y favorece y permite la reutilización de las mismas bajo la licencia de uso indicada en el punto 2.
2. Las obras se publican en la edición electrónica de la revista bajo una licencia Creative Commons Reconocimiento-NoComercial-SinObraDerivada 3.0 España (texto legal). Se pueden copiar, usar, difundir, transmitir y exponer públicamente, siempre que: i) se cite la autoría y la fuente original de su publicación (revista, editorial y URL de la obra); ii) no se usen para fines comerciales; iii) se mencione la existencia y especificaciones de esta licencia de uso.
3. Condiciones de auto-archivo. Se permite y se anima a los autores a difundir electrónicamente las versiones pre-print (versión antes de ser evaluada) y/o post-print (versión evaluada y aceptada para su publicación) de sus obras antes de su publicación, ya que favorece su circulación y difusión más temprana y con ello un posible aumento en su citación y alcance entre la comunidad académica. Color RoMEO: verde.