Creating the Pocky Women

Authors

  • Kathleen Reynolds

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.29173/cons10493

Abstract

The sexually transmitted disease known as “The French Pox,” a forerunner of modern syphilis, represented a significant departure from early modern European knowledge of disease. Particularly distinctive was the gendered nature of the disease; females were labeled responsible for the formation of disease and thus associated with the moral corruption of the pox. This article examines the roots of this societal sexism in the Christian Pauline theory, using the binary between male and female to appreciate the development of the pox and the social differentiation that occurred as a result of its contagion.

Author Biography

Kathleen Reynolds

Kathleen Reynolds is completing her final semester of a Bachelor of Arts in History, minoring in English.  Her primary research interests are medical and gendered history in early modern Europe.  She will be entering a thesis based Masters at McGill this September.

Downloads

Published

2011-06-07

How to Cite

Reynolds, K. (2011). Creating the Pocky Women. Constellations, 2(2), 41–51. https://doi.org/10.29173/cons10493

Issue

Section

Gender History