In: Oxford Journal of Archaeology, 2008, vol. 27, no. 1, p. 49-62
Ancient medical discourse conveys a mainly negative view of children's bodies. From Hippocrates to Galen, newborn children are defined as imperfect and ugly beings, associating an excessive softness and weakness with various anomalies. Aristotle links their physical disproportions with those of dwarfs and animals. These disproportions induce physiological troubles and mental incapacities....
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In: Latomus, 2003, vol. 62, no. 2, p. 275-289
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In: L'Enfant et la mort dans l'Antiquité I. Nouvelles recherrches dans les nécropoles grecques. Le signalement des tombes d'enfants., 2010, p. 19-44
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In: Le statut du musicien dans la Méditerranée ancienne Égypte, Mésopotamie, Grèce, Rome, 2013, p. 259-277
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In: Gesnerus, 1997, no. 54, p. 5-22
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In: Etudes de Lettres: Imagiers et artistes. Essais sémiotiques, 1983, no. 4, p. 55-73
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In: Le portrait. La représentation de l'individu, 2007, p. 17-33
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In: The Oxford Handbook of Childhood and Education in the Classical World, 2013, p. 17-39
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In: Hoping for continuity. Childhood, education and death in Antiquity and Middle Ages, 2005, p. 72-83
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In: BODIES IN TRANSITION: Dissolving the Boundaries of Embodied Knowledge, 2015, p. 153-177
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