From the fourteenth through the sixteenth centuries in Spain,
health-related information in the vernacular began to circulate
widely in treatises, compendiums, manuals, plague tracts,
summaries, encyclopedias, and recipe collections. These were often
the work of concerned physicians who attempted to refashion medical
information to appeal to nonprofessionals. In "Fictions of
Well-Being" Michael Solomon explores the shaping of this audience
of sickly readers, highly motivated individuals who, when
confronted with the painful, disruptive, and often alienating
conditions of physical disorder, looked for relief in
books.Vernacular medical writing from late medieval and early
modern Spain emerged from the interrelated imperatives to address
the immediate or future hygienic and pathological needs of the
patient while promoting the reputation and learned credentials of
the physician. For sickly readers, a medical treatise was more than
just a collection of technical information; such a work implied
that they could do with a medical text what the physician normally
did at the bedside. In their imagination, the treatise became a
type of palpable instrument that encouraged the reader to take
advantage of its possible use and benefits. In these fictions of
well-being, we may see the antecedents of the self-help and popular
medical books so prominent on today's best-seller lists.
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