University of Toronto Press
Illness and Authority
About this book
Illness and Authority is the first monograph-length study to examine a well-known medieval saint from the perspective of disability studies.
Author / Editor information
Donna Trembinski is an associate professor of Medieval History at St. Francis Xavier University.
Reviews
“It is not hyperbole to suggest that this book will have an immediate and long-lasting effect both on scholarship on the Franciscans and on medieval disability studies. It is a welcome addition to both.”
Leigh Ann Craig, Virginia Commonwealth University:
“Trembinski’s new monograph, rooted in Francis’s lived experience and admirable in all particulars for its thorough scholarly acumen, offers a crucial refinement of our historical understanding of Francis’s life, and of the origins and development of his order.”
Tory V. Pearman, Department of Languages, Literatures, and Writing, Miami University Hamilton:
"In this important study, Trembinski presents a reinterpretation of St. Francis of Assisi that reframes the saint's oft-ignored illnesses and impairments as essential to his (in)ability to access traditional masculine power, both spiritual and secular. By offering an innovative reading of the saint through the lens of disability theory, Illness and Authority reveals how the disabled body of St. Francis has exceeded and challenged the narrative constraints of not only medieval hagiographers but also the modern historian."
Wendy Turner, Department of History, Anthropology and Philosophy, Augusta University:
"Trembinski is the leading authority on the health and disabilities of Francis of Assisi. In this monograph, she shows us a world of admiring followers, medieval prisons, veneration of bones, prayer, and ascetism. She also shines a light on the medieval diet, care for the impaired, and medicine. We think of Francis as the saint who walked from town to town, preaching to anyone who would listen, even the birds. Trembinski shows us another side to Francis: a man who lived with pain, who suffered from weakness and frailty, who sought medicines for internal ailments and eye complaints, and who died relatively young."
Steven J. McMichael, Theology Department, University of St. Thomas :
"Trembinski’s excellent study touches on so many issues of Francis’ life, especially the later stages: Francis’ surrender of leadership; the questions of obedience and authority; and his struggle with blindness, leprosy, and bodily pain. It is an excellent survey of Franciscan sources regarding Francis’ illness and how they have been interpreted in history."
Topics
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Frontmatter
i -
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Contents
vii -
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Acknowledgments
ix -
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Abbreviations
xi -
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Introduction
3 -
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Chapter One Francis Overdiagnosed and Undiagnosed
26 -
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Chapter Two Recentring Illness and Infirmity in Francis’ Lived Experience
36 -
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Chapter Three Et licet infirmus fuisset semper: Testimonies of Illness in the Early Lives of Francis
47 -
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Chapter Four Disability and Tensions in Francis’ Lived Experience
85 -
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Chapter Five The Hagiographers’ Search for Meaning
108 -
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Chapter Six On Disability, Power, and Gender: A Speculative Conclusion
131 -
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Postscript: On the Importance of Disability as a Category of Analysis
158 -
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Appendix Recentring Illness: A Revised Chronology of Francis’ Life
161 -
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Notes
163 -
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Bibliography
229 -
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Index
247