[en] This article explores the epistemic value of touch in Italian Renaissance anatomy. Using archival and printed postmortem records from canonization processes and anatomical writings, it shows that haptic expertise (Greek ἅπτομαι (haptomai): to touch) entailed not only the acquisition of practical skills but also the ability to discern, experience, and fully describe organic substances. Looking at the practices, languages, and theories underpinning medical and holy anatomies, I propose that haptic epistemologies lie at the heart of the understanding of the body in the early modern period, a time largely recognized to have transformed the relation to visuality in the sciences and the arts.
Centre/Unité de recherche :
Traverses - ULiège
Disciplines :
Histoire
Auteur, co-auteur :
Von Hoffmann, Viktoria ; Université de Liège - ULiège > Département des sciences historiques > Histoire culturelle
Langue du document :
Anglais
Titre :
Epistemologies of Touch in Early Modern Holy Autopsies
Agrimi, Jole, and Chiara Crisciani. “Per una Ricerca su Experimentum-Experimenta: Riflessione Epistemologica e Tradizione Medica (secoli XIII–XV).” In Presenza del Lessico Greco e Latino nelle Lingue Contemporanee, ed. Pietro Janni and Innocenzo Mazzini, 9–49. Macerata: Univeristà degli Studi di Macerata, 1990.
“AHR Forum: The Senses in History.” Special issue, American Historical Review 116.2 (April 2011): 307–400.
Andretta, Elisa. “Anatomie du Vénérable dans la Rome de la Contre-Réforme: Les autopsies d’Ignace de Loyola et de Philippe Neri.” In Conflicting Duties: Science, Medicine and Religion in Rome, 1550–1750, ed. Maria Pia Donato and Jill Kraye, 255–80. London: Warburg Institute; Turin: Nino Aragno Editore, 2009.
Andretta, Elisa. Roma Medica: Anatomie d’un système médical au XVIe siècle. Rome: École Française de Rome, 2011.
Bénatouïl, Thomas, and Isabelle Draelants, eds. Expertus sum: L’expérience par les sens dans la philosophie naturelle médiévale. Florence: SISMEL Edizioni del Galuzzo, 2011.
Beneduce, Chiara. “Personalized Medicine and Complexio: ‘What is Human?’ as a Medical Question.” Etica Politica / Ethics Politics 21.2 (2019): 89–98.
Bertoloni Meli, Domenico. Mechanism, Experiment, Disease: Marcello Malpighi and Seventeenth-Century Anatomy. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2011.
Bertoloni Meli, Domenico, and Rebecca Wilkin, eds. “Observation and Experiment in Mechanistic Anatomy.” Special issue, Early Science and Medicine 13.6 (2008): 531–709.
Bigotti, Fabrizio. Physiology of the Soul: Mind, Body and Matter in the Galenic Tradition of the Late Renaissance (1550–1630). Turnhout: Brepols, 2019.
Boddice, Rob, and Mark Smith. Emotion, Sense, Experience. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2020.
The Body as Object and Instrument of Knowledge: Embodied Empiricism in Early Modern Science. Ed. Charles T. Wolfe and Ofer Gal. Dordrecht: Springer, 2010.
The Body of Evidence: Corpses and Proofs in Early Modern European Medicine. Ed. Francesco P. De Ceglia. Leiden: Brill, 2020.
Boer, Weitse de, and Christine Göttler, eds. Religion and the Senses in Early Modern Europe. Leiden: Brill, 2012.
Bouley, Bradford A. Pious Postmortems: Anatomy, Sanctity, and the Catholic Church in Early Modern Europe. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2017.
Bouvier, Michel. “De l’incorruptibilité des corps saints.” In Les Miracles, miroirs des corps, ed. Jacques Gélis and Odile Redon, 193–221. Paris: Presses et publications de l’Université de Paris VIII–Vincennes à Saint-Denis, 1983.
Breve Relatione della Vita, Miracoli, et Canonizatione della Gloriosa Vergine S. Teresa di Giesù Fondatrice de’Carmelitani Scalzi. Rome: Bartolomeo Zannetti, 1622.
Brill’s Companion to the Reception of Galen. Ed. Petros Bouras-Vallianatos and Barbara Zipser. Leiden: Brill, 2019.
Burke, Peter. “How to Be a Counter-Reformation Saint.” In Religion and Society in Early Modern Europe 1500–1800, ed. Kaspar von Greyerz, 45–55. London: German Historical Institute, 1984.
Bynum, Caroline Walker. “The Female Body and Religious Practice in the Later Middle Ages.” In Fragmentation and Redemption: Essays on Gender and the Human Body in Medieval Religion, ed. Caroline Walker Bynum, 181–238. New York: Urzone Publishers, 1991.
Bynum, Caroline Walker. The Resurrection of the Body in Western Christianity, 200–1336. New York: Columbia University Press, 1995.
Bynum, Caroline Walker. Christian Materiality: An Essay on Religion in Late Medieval Europe. New York: Zone Books, 2011.
Bynum, William F., and Roy Porter, eds. Medicine and the Five Senses. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993.
Canetti, Luigi. Frammenti di eternità: Corpi e reliquie tra antichità e medioevo. Rome: Viella, 2002.
Carlino, Andrea. “L’exception et la règle: A propos du XVe livre du De re anatomica de Realdo Colombo.” In Maladies, Médecines, et Sociétés: Approches historiques pour le présent; actes du VIe colloque d’Histoire au présent, 1:170–76. Paris: L’Harmattan Association “Histoire au présent,” 1993.
Carlino, Andrea. Books of the Body: Anatomical Ritual and Renaissance Learning. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1999.
Carpi, Jacopo Berengario da. Carpi Commentaria cum Amplissimis Additionibus Super Anatomia Mundini. Bologna: Girolamo de’ Benedetti, 1521.
Carrillo-Rangel, David, Delfi I. Nieto-Isabel, and Pablo Acosta-García, eds. Touching, Devotional Practices, and Visionary Experience in the Late Middle Ages. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan, 2019.
Casserius, Julius. De Vocis Auditusque Organis Historia Anatomica. Ferrara: Victorius Baldinus, n.d., ca. 1600.
Casserius, Julius. The Larynx, Organ of Voice by Julius Casserius. Ed. Malcolm H. Hast and Erling B. Holtsmark. Uppsala: Almqvist Wiksells, 1969.
Cavallo, Sandra. Artisans of the Body in Early Modern Italy: Identities, Families and Masculinities. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2007.
Chandelier, Joël, and Aurélien Robert. “Nature humaine et complexion du corps chez les médecins italiens de la fin du Moyen Âge.” Revue de Synthèse 134.4 (2013): 473–510.
Christofani, Federigo. Vita di S. Andreae Corsini Fiorentino dell’ordine carmelitano vescovo di Fiesole: Ràccolta dalla Vita Latina scritta da Monsignor Francesco Venturi Vescovo di S. Severo; Con gli atti della Canonizatione, e con la descrittione del Teatro. Rome: Bartolomeo Zannetti, 1629.
Ciappelli, Giovanni. Un Santo alla battaglia di Anghiari: La “vita” e il culto di Andrea Corsini nella Firenze del Rinascimento. Florence: SISMEL Edizioni del Galluzzo, 2007.
Classen, Constance. The Book of Touch. Oxford: Berg, 2005.
Classen, Constance. The Deepest Sense: A Cultural History of Touch. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2012.
Colombo, Realdo. De Re Anatomica Libri XV. Venice: Nicolai Bevilacquae, 1559.
Copeland, Clare. “Sanctity.” In The Ashgate Research Companion to the Counter-Reformation, ed. Alexandra Bamji, Geert H. Janssen, and Mary Laven, 225–42. London: Routledge, 2016.
Corbin, Alain. “Histoire et Anthropologie sensorielle.” Anthropologie et Sociétés 14.2 (1990): 13–24.
Crisciani, Chiara. “Fatti, teorie, ‘narration’ e malati a corte: Note su empirismo in medicine nel tardo-medioevo.” Quaderni storici 108.36.3 (December 2001): 695–718.
Cunningham, Andrew. The Anatomical Renaissance: The Resurrection of the Anatomical Projects of the Ancients. Aldershot: Scolar Press, 1997.
Cunsolo, Elisabetta. “Giulio Casserio e la pubblicazione del De Vocis Auditusque organis tra Padova e Ferrara all’inizio del’600.” Mélanges de l’école française de Rome: Italie Méditerranée 120.2 (2008): 385–405.
Dacome, Lucia. Malleable Anatomies: Models, Makers, and Material Culture in Eighteenth-Century Italy. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2017.
Daston, Lorraine. “Marvelous Facts and Miraculous Evidence in Early Modern Europe.” Critical Inquiry 18.1 (1991): 93–124.
Daston, Lorraine, and Katharine Park. Wonders and the Order of Nature, 1150–1750. New York: Zone Books, 1998.
De Abditis Nonnullis ac Mirandis Morborum et Sanationum Causis. Antonio Benivieni. Ed. Giorgio Weber. Florence: Olschki, 1994.
Dear, Peter. Discipline and Experience: The Mathematical Way in the Scientific Revolution. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1995.
De Ceglia, Francesco P. “Introduction: Corpses, Evidence and Medical Knowledge in the Late Middle Ages and the Early Modern Age.” In The Body of Evidence (2020), 1–20.
De Renzi, Silvia. “Witnesses of the Body: Medico-Legal Cases in Seventeenth-Century Rome.” Studies in History and Philosophy of Science 33.2 (2002): 219–42.
De Renzi, Silvia. “Medical Competence, Anatomy and the Polity in Seventeenth-Century Rome.” Renaissance Studies 21.4 (2007): 551–67.
De Renzi, Silvia. “Per una biografia di Paolo Zacchia: Nuovi documenti e ipotesi di ricercar.” In Paolo Zacchia (2008), 50–73.
De Renzi, Silvia, Marco Bresadola, and Maria Conforti, eds. Pathology in Practice: Diseases and Dissections in Early Modern Europe. London: Routledge, 2018.
De Renzi, Silvia, and Maria Conforti. “Sapere anatomico negli ospedali romani: Formazione dei chirurghi e pratiche sperimentali (1620–1720).” In Rome et la science moderne: Entre Renaissance et Lumières, ed. Antonella Romano, 433–72. Rome: École Française de Rome, 2008.
Ditchfield, Simon. “How Not to Be a Counter-Reformation Saint: The Attempted Canonization of Pope Gregory X, 1622–45.” Papers of the British School at Rome 60 (1992): 379–422.
Ditchfield, Simon. Liturgy, Sanctity and History in Tridentine Italy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995.
Ditchfield, Simon. “Thinking with Saints: Sanctity and Society in the Early Modern World.” Critical Inquiry 35.3 (2009): 552–84.
Donato, Marie Pia. “Anatomia, autopsia, sectio: Problem di fonti e di metodo (secoli XVI–XVII).” In Anatome: Sezione, scomposizione, raffigurazione del corpo nell’età moderna, ed. Giuseppe Olmi and Claudia Pancino, 137–60. Bologna: Bononia University Press, 2012.
Donato, Marie Pia. “Galen in an Age of Change (1650–1820).” In Brill’s Companion to the Reception of Galen (2019), 487–507.
Duden, Barbara. The Woman Beneath the Skin: A Doctor’s Patients in Eighteenth-Century Germany. Trans. Dunlap Thomas. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1991.
Duffin, Jacalyn. Medical Miracles: Doctors, Saints, and Healing in the Modern World. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2009.
Duffin, Jacalyn. “Questioning Medicine in Seventeenth-Century Rome: The Consultations of Paolo Zacchia.” Bulletin canadien d’histoire de la médecine / Canadian Bulletin of Medical History 28.1 (2011): 149–70.
Eamon, William. Science and the Secrets of Nature: Books of Secrets in Medieval and Early Modern Culture. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1994.
Fasciculus Medicinae. Venice: Giovanni de’Gregori, 1495.
Fortuna, Stefania. “The Latin Editions of Galen’s Opera Omnia (1490–1625) and Their Prefaces.” Early Science and Medicine 17.4 (2012): 391–412.
French, Roger. “A Note on the Anatomical Accessus of the Middle Ages.” Medical History 23 (1979): 461–68.
French, Roger. “Berengario da Carpi and the Use of Commentary in Anatomical Teaching.” In The Medical Renaissance of the Sixteenth Century, ed. Andrew Wear, Roger K. French, and Iain M. Lonie, 42–74. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1985.
French, Roger. Dissection and Vivisection in the European Renaissance. Farnham: Ashgate, 1999. Gadebusch Bondio, Mariacarla, ed. Die Hand: Elemente einer Medizin- und Kulturgeschichte. Berlin: Lit, 2010.
Galen of Pergamon. Works on Human Nature, Volume I: “Mixtures” (“De Temperamentis”). Ed. P. N. Singer and Philip J. Van der Eijk, with Piero Tassinari. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2018.
García-Ballester, Luis. “The New Galen: A Challenge to Latin Galenism in Thirteenth-Century Montpellier.” In Text and Tradition: Studies in Ancient Medicine and Its Transmission; Presented to Jutta Kollesch, ed. Klaus-Dietrich Fischer, Diethard Nickel, and Paul Potter, 55–83. Leiden: Brill, 1998.
García-Ballester, Luis, Roger French, Jon Arrizabalaga, and Andrew Cunningham, eds. Practical Medicine from Salerno to the Black Death. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1994.
Gentilcore David. “Contesting Illness in Early Modern Naples: Miracolati, Physicians and the Congregation of Rites.” Past and Present 148 (1995): 117–48.
Gowing, Laura. Common Bodies: Women, Touch and Power in Seventeenth-Century England. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2003.
Green, Monica H. Making Women’s Medicine Masculine: The Rise of Male Authority in Pre-Modern Gynaecology. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2008.
Harvey, Elizabeth D. Sensible Flesh: On Touch in Early Modern Culture. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2003.
Harvey, Elizabeth D. “The Portal of Touch.” American Historical Review 116.2 (2011): 385–400.
Heller-Roazen, Daniel. The Inner Touch: Archaeology of a Sensation. New York: Zone Books, 2007.
Heseler, Baldasar. Andreas Vesalius’ First Public Anatomy at Bologna 1540: An Eyewitness Report by Baldasar Heseler Medicinae Scolaris Together with His Notes on Matthaeus Curtius’ Lectures on Anatomia Mundini. Ed. Ruben Eriksson. Uppsala: Almqvist Wiksells, 1959.
Histories of Scientific Observation. Ed. Lorraine Daston and Elizabeth Lunbeck. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2011.
Howes, David, ed. Empire of the Senses: The Sensual Culture Reader. Oxford: Berg, 2005.
Howes, David. “Charting the Sensorial Revolution.” Senses and Society 1.1 (2006): 113–26.
“I cinque sensi / The Five Senses.” Special issue, Micrologus: Natura, scienze e società medievali 10 (2002).
Jacquart, Danielle. “De crasis à complexio: Note sur le vocabulaire du tempérament en latin médiéval.” In Textes médicaux latins antiques, ed. Guy Sabbah, 71–76. Saint-Étienne: Publications de l’Université de Saint-Étienne, 1984.
Jacquart, Danielle. “La notion d’ingenium dans la médecine médiévale.” In Knowledge and the Sciences in Medieval Philosophy: Proceedings of the Eighth International Congress of Medieval Philosophy (S.I.E.P.M.), Helsinki, 24–29 August 1987, ed. Simo Knuuttila, Reijo Työrinoja, and Sten Ebbesen, 2:62–70. Helsinki: Yliopistopaino, 1990.
Johnson, Geraldine. “Touch, Tactility, and the Reception of Sculpture in Early Modern Italy.” In A Companion to Art Theory, ed. Paul Smith and Carolyn Wilde, 61–74. Oxford: Blackwell, 2008.
Johnson, Geraldine. “Embodying Devotion: Multisensory Encounters with Donatello’s Crucifix in S. Croce.” Renaissance Quarterly 73.4 (2020): 1179–234.
Jones, Lynette. Haptics. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2018.
Jütte, Robert. A History of the Senses: From Antiquity to Cyberspace. Trans. James Lynn. Oxford: Polity, 2003.
Kambaskovic-Sawers, Danijela, and Charles T. Wolfe. “The Senses in Philosophy and Science: From the Nobility of Sight to the Materialism of Touch.” In A Cultural History of the Senses in the Renaissance, ed. Herman Roodenburg, 107–25. London: Bloomsbury, 2014.
Kaye, Joel. A History of Balance, 1250–1375: The Emergence of a New Model of Equilibrium and Its Impact on Thought. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2014.
Klestinec, Cynthia. “Civility, Comportment, and the Anatomy Theater: Girolamo Fabrici and His Medical Students in Renaissance Padua.” Renaissance Quarterly 60.2 (2007): 434–63.
Klestinec, Cynthia. “Practical Experience in Anatomy.” In The Body as Object (2010), 33–57.
Klestinec, Cynthia. Theaters of Anatomy: Students, Teachers, and Traditions of Dissection in Renaissance Venice. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2011.
Klestinec, Cynthia. “Touch, Trust, and Compliance in Early Modern Medical Practice.” In The Edinburgh Companion to the Critical Medical Humanities, ed. Anne Whitehead, Angela Woods, Sarah Atkinson, et al., 209–24. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2016.
Kusukawa, Sachiko. Picturing the Book of Nature: Image, Text, and Argument in 16th-Century Human Anatomy and Medical Botany. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2012.
Kuuliala, Jenni. “Cure, Community, and the Miraculous in Early Modern Florence.” In Lived Religion and Everyday Life in Early Modern Hagiographic Material, ed. Jenni Kuuliala, Rose-Marie Peake, and Päivi Räisänen-Schröder, 265–92. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan, 2019.
Kuuliala, Jenni. “The Saint as Medicator: Medicine and the Miraculous in Fifteenth- and Sixteenth-Century Italy.” Social History of Medicine 34.3 (2021): 703–22.
Lawrence, Christopher, and Steven Shapin, eds. Science Incarnate: Historical Embodiments of Natural Knowledge. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1998.
Lind, Levi Robert. Studies in Pre-Vesalian Anatomy: Biography, Translations, Documents. Philadelphia: American Philosophical Society, 1975.
Long, Pamela. Artisan / Practitioners and the Rise of the New Sciences 1400–1600. Corvallis: Oregon State University Press, 2011.
Maclean, Ian. Logic, Signs and Nature in the Renaissance: The Case of Learned Medicine. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002.
Mandressi, Rafael. Le regard de l’anatomiste: Dissections et invention du corps en Occident. Paris: Seuil, 2003.
Mandressi, Rafael. “De l’œil et du texte: Preuve, expérience et témoignage dans les ‘sciences du corps.’” Communications 84.1 (2009): 103–18.
Massa, Niccolò. Liber Introductorius Anatomiae, siue Dissectionis Corporis Humani. Venice, 1536.
Maurette, Pablo. “Touch, Hands, Kiss, Skin: Tactility in Early Modern Europe.” PhD diss., University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 2013.
Maurette, Pablo. “Plato’s Hermaphrodite and a Vindication of the Sense of Touch in the Sixteenth Century.” Renaissance Quarterly 68.3 (2015): 872–98.
Maurette, Pablo. The Forgotten Sense: Meditations on Touch. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2018a.
Maurette, Pablo. “The Organ of Organs: Vesalius and the Wonders of the Human Hand.” Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies 48.1 (2018b): 105–24.
McVaugh, Michael. “Galen in the Medieval Universities, 1200–1400.” In Brill’s Companion to the Reception of Galen (2019), 381–92.
Medicine and the Italian Universities 1250–1600. Ed. Nancy Siraisi. Leiden: Brill, 2001.
Morrall, Andrew, Mary Laven, and Suzanna Ivanic, eds. Religious Materiality in the Early Modern World. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2019.
Moshenska, Joe. Feeling Pleasures: The Sense of Touch in Renaissance England. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014.
Murphy, Hannah. “Skin and Disease in Early Modern Medicine: Jan Jessen’s De cute, et cutaneis affectibus (1601).” Bulletin of the History of Medicine 94.2 (2020): 179–214.
Nutton, Vivian. “The Fortunes of Galen.” In The Cambridge Companion to Galen, ed. Robert J. Hankinson, 355–90. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2008.
Nutton, Vivian. “Renaissance Galenism, 1540–1640: Flexibility or an Increasing Irrelevance?” In Brill’s Companion to the Reception of Galen (2019), 472–86.
O’Rourke Boyle, Marjorie. Senses of Touch: Human Dignity and Deformity from Michelangelo to Calvin. Leiden: Brill, 1998.
Papa, Giovanni. “La Sacra Congregazione dei Riti nel primo periodo di attività (1588–1624).” In Miscellanea in occasione del IV centenario della Congregazione per le Cause dei Santi (1588–1988), 13–52. Vatican City: Città del Vaticano, 1988.
Parisi, David. Archaeologies of Touch: Interfacing with Haptics from Electricity to Computing. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2018.
Park, Katharine. “The Criminal and the Saintly Body: Autopsy and Dissection in Renaissance Italy.” Renaissance Quarterly 47.1 (1994): 1–33.
Park, Katharine. Secrets of Women: Gender, Generation, and the Origins of Human Dissection. New York: Zone Books, 2006.
Park, Katharine. “Holy Autopsies: Saintly Bodies and Medical Expertise, 1300–1600.” In The Body in Early Modern Italy, ed. Julia Hairston and Walter Stephens, 61–73. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2010.
Park, Katharine. “Observation in the Margins, 500–1500.” In Histories of Scientific Observation (2011), 15–44.
Pastore, Alessandro, and Giovanni Rossi, eds. Paolo Zacchia, 1584–1659: Alle origini della medicina legale. Milan: FrancoAngeli, 2008.
Paterson, Mark. The Senses of Touch: Haptics, Affects, and Technologies. Oxford: Berg, 2007.
“La pelle umana / The Human Skin.” Special issue, Micrologus: Natura, scienze e società medievali 13 (2005).
Pomata, Gianna. “Malpighi and the Holy Body: Medical Experts and Miraculous Evidence in Seventeenth-Century Italy.” Renaissance Studies 21.4 (2007): 568–86.
Pomata, Gianna. “Sharing Cases: The Observationes in Early Modern Medicine.” Early Science and Medicine 15.3 (2010): 193–236.
Pomata, Gianna. “Observation Rising: Birth of an Epistemic genre, ca. 1500–1650.” In Histories of Scientific Observation (2011), 45–80.
Pomata, Gianna. “The Medical Case Narrative: Distant Reading of an Epistemic Genre.” Literature and Medicine 32.1 (2014): 1–23.
Pomata, Gianna, and Nancy Siraisi, eds. Historia: Empiricism and Erudition in Early Modern Europe. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2005.
Il primo processo per San Filippo Neri nel codice vaticano latino 3798 e in altri esemplari dell’Archivio dell’Oratorio di Roma, vol. 2. Ed. Incisa della Rocchetta. Vatican City: Biblioteca apostolica vaticana, 1958.
Quiviger, François. The Sensory World of Italian Renaissance Art. London: Reaktion Books, 2010.
Randolph, Adrian W. B. Touching Objects: Intimate Experiences of Italian Fifteenth-Century Art. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2014.
Reinarz, Jonathan, and Kevin Siena, eds. A Medical History of Skin: Scratching the Surface. London: Pickering and Chatto, 2013.
Roberts, Lissa, Peter Dear, and Simon Schaffer, eds. The Mindful Hand: Inquiry and Invention from the Late Renaissance to Early Industrialization. Amsterdam: Koninkliijke Nederlandse Akademie van Wetenschappen, 2007.
Robinson, Kira. Healers in the Making: Students, Physicians, and Medical Education in Medieval Bologna (1250–1550). Leiden: Brill, 2020.
Rowe, Katherine. “‘God’s Handy Worke’: Divine Complicity and the Anatomist’s Touch.” In The Body in Parts: Fantasies of Corporeality in Early Modern Europe, ed. David Hillman and Carla Mazzio, 284–309. London: Routledge, 1997.
Rowe, Katherine. Dead Hands: Fictions of Agency, Renaissance to Modern. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1999.
Salmann, Jean-Michel. Naples et ses saints à l’âge baroque: 1540–1750. Paris: Presses Universitaires de France, 1994.
Savoia, Paolo. Gaspare Tagliacozzi and Early Modern Surgery: Faces, Men, and Pain. London: Routledge, 2019.
Sawday, Jonathan. The Body Emblazoned: Dissection and the Human Body in Renaissance Culture. London: Routledge, 1996.
Shapin, Steven. A Social History of Truth: Civility and Science in Seventeenth-Century England. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1994.
Shapin, Steven, and Simon Schaffer. Leviathan and the Air-Pump: Hobbes, Boyle, and the Experimental Life. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1985.
Shotwell, Allen. “Animals, Pictures and Skeletons: Andreas Vesalius’s Reinvention of the Public Anatomy Lesson.” Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences 71.1 (2016): 1–18.
Shotwell, Allen. “Dissection Techniques, Forensics and Anatomy in the 16th Century.” In The Body of Evidence (2020), 107–18.
Siraisi, Nancy. Taddeo Alderotti and His Pupils: Two Generations of Italian Medical Learning. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1981.
Siraisi, Nancy. “‘Remarkable’ Diseases, ‘Remarkable’ Cures, and Personal Experience in Renaissance Medical Texts.” In Medicine and the Italian Universities (2001a), 226–52.
Siraisi, Nancy. “Signs and Evidence: Autopsy and Sanctity in Late Sixteenth-Century Italy.” In Medicine and the Italian Universities (2001b), 356–80.
Siraisi, Nancy. History, Medicine, and the Traditions of Renaissance Learning. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2007.
Smith, Mark. “Producing Sense, Consuming Sense, Making Sense: Perils and Prospects for Sensory History.” Journal of Social History 40.4 (2007): 841–58.
Smith, Pamela. The Body of the Artisan: Art and Experience in the Scientific Revolution. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2004.
Smoller, Laura A. “Miracle, Memory, and Meaning in the Canonization of Vincent Ferrer, 1453–54.” Speculum 73.2 (1998): 429–54.
Spary, Emma. Eating the Enlightenment: Food and Sciences in Paris, 1670–1760. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2012.
Sterzi, Giuseppe. Giulio Casserio, anatomico e chirurgico (c. 1552–1616). Venice: Istituto Veneto di arti grafiche, 1909.
Stolberg, Michael. “Empiricism in Sixteenth-Century Medical Practice.” Early Science and Medicine 18.6 (2013a): 487–516.
Stolberg, Michael. “Examining the Body, c. 1500–1750.” In The Routledge History of Sex and the Body: 1500 to the Present, ed. Sarah Toulalan and Kate Fisher, 91–105. London: Routledge, 2013b.
Stolberg, Michael. “Bedside Teaching and the Acquisition of Practical Skills in Mid-Sixteenth-Century Padua.” Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences 69.4 (2014): 633–61.
Stolberg, Michael. Gelehrte Medizin und ärztlicher Alltag in der Renaissance. Berlin: De Gruyter, 2021.
Summers, David. The Judgment of Sense: Renaissance Naturalism and the Rise of Aesthetics. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1990.
Tullett, William. “State of the Field: Sensory History.” History: The Journal of the Historical Association 106.373 (December 2021): 804–20.
Tutino, Stefania. Shadows of Doubt: Language and Truth in Post-Reformation Catholic Culture. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014.
Tutino, Stefania. Uncertainty in Post-Reformation Catholicism: A History of Probabilism. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2018.
Van der Eijk, Philip. “Galen on the Assessment of Bodily Mixtures.” In The Frontiers of Ancient Science: Essays in Honor of Heinrich von Staden, ed. Brooke Holmes and Klaus-Dietrich Fischer, 675–98. Berlin: De Gruyter, 2015.
Vauchez, André. La Sainteté en Occident aux derniers siècles du Moyen Age: D’après les procès de canonisation et les documents hagiographiques. Rome: École Française de Rome, 1988.
Vesalius, Andreas. Andreae Vesalii Bruxellensis, Scholae Medicorum Patavinae Professoris, de Humani Corporis Fabrica Libri Septem. Basel: Johannes Oporinus, 1543.
von Hoffmann, Viktoria. From Gluttony to Enlightenment: The World of Taste in Early Modern Europe. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2016.
von Hoffmann, Viktoria. “Ingeniosa peritia: The Languages of Ingenuity in Italian Renaissance Anatomy.” In Ingenuity in the Making: Matter and Technique in Early Modern Europe, ed. Richard J. Oosterhoff, José Ramón Marcaida, and Alexander Marr, 94–111. Pittsburgh, PA: Pittsburgh University Press, 2021.
Weber, Giorgio. “Introduzione.” In De Abditis Nonnullis (1994), 7–13.
Wragge-Morley, Alexander. Aesthetic Science: Representing Nature in the Royal Society of London, 1650–1720. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2020.
Ziegler, Joseph. “Practitioners and Saints: Medical Men in Canonization Processes in the Thirteenth to Fifteenth Centuries.” Social History of Medicine 12.2 (1999): 191–225.