Introducing Women's Alchemical Cultures
Over the Use few decades, scholars such as Lynette Hunter, Sarah Hutton, Alisha Rankin, and Meredith Ray have turned to the era of the European scientific revolution--the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries--to investigate women's contribution to the history of science. This research is importa...
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Published in | Early modern women Vol. 15; no. 2; pp. 89 - 92 |
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Main Author | |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
Chicago
Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies
01.03.2021
The University of Chicago Press University of Chicago Press |
Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | Over the Use few decades, scholars such as Lynette Hunter, Sarah Hutton, Alisha Rankin, and Meredith Ray have turned to the era of the European scientific revolution--the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries--to investigate women's contribution to the history of science. This research is important because it has spotlighted women scientists from the past and demonstrated that scientific inquiry is not simply a male phenomenon. There is one area in the history of science that has recently started to develop as a burgeoning field of analysis: women's involvement in alchemy. During the Renaissance, alchemy referred to the craft of chemical transmutation, both physical and metaphysical (the conversion of "base" man/woman into a state of spiritual perfection). The forum begins with a literature review by Sarah Hutton that outlines what we currently know about women as practitioners of alchemy in the early modern period. Hutton further adds to the history of alchemy a hitherto understudied figure: the woman philosopher. |
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ISSN: | 1933-0065 2378-4776 |
DOI: | 10.1353/emw.2021.0027 |