| Nome: | Descrição: | Tamanho: | Formato: | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5.55 MB | Adobe PDF |
Orientador(es)
Resumo(s)
Considerado por Plínio uma das substâncias medicinais mais benéficas,
o leite materno é ingrediente louvado em todos os tratados de matéria médica
pelas suas qualidades curativas. Ainda assim, os textos médicos sobre a condição e
as doenças femininas desenvolvem um conjunto de reflexões acerca das qualidades
do leite materno, em especial nas primeiras semanas após o parto, que questionam
as vantagens de o recém-nascido ser amamentado pela mãe. Tomando esta reflexão
como base, avaliamos que importância se concedia à amamentação materna numa
sociedade como a romana, em que a contratação de amas-de-leite parece ter sido
comum. Procuramos na análise dos textos acerca da alimentação do recém-nascido
e do regime de vida das amas-de-leite traços da construção cultural da maternidade
e da natureza da relação entre a mãe e os seus filhos.
Pliny considered breast milk one of the most beneficial medicinal substances, a much praised ingredient in all treatises about materia medica due to its healing qualities. Still, the medical texts about female nature and diseases weave a series of considerations about the qualities of breast milk, especially in the first weeks after birth, and question the advantages for the newborn being breastfed by the mother. Taking this reflection as a basis, we assess the importance granted to breastfeeding in Roman society, where hiring wetnurses seems to have been a common practice. We analyse texts that provide information about how to feed a newborn and how wetnurses should live, in order to perceive the cultural construction of motherhood and the expected nature of the relationship between the mother and her children.
Pliny considered breast milk one of the most beneficial medicinal substances, a much praised ingredient in all treatises about materia medica due to its healing qualities. Still, the medical texts about female nature and diseases weave a series of considerations about the qualities of breast milk, especially in the first weeks after birth, and question the advantages for the newborn being breastfed by the mother. Taking this reflection as a basis, we assess the importance granted to breastfeeding in Roman society, where hiring wetnurses seems to have been a common practice. We analyse texts that provide information about how to feed a newborn and how wetnurses should live, in order to perceive the cultural construction of motherhood and the expected nature of the relationship between the mother and her children.
Descrição
Palavras-chave
História da medicina Medicina antiga Infância na antiguidade clássica Amamentação Maternidade Sorano de Éfeso
