id |
oapen-20.500.12657-48758
|
record_format |
dspace
|
spelling |
oapen-20.500.12657-487582022-04-28T11:39:49Z Chapter 8 “That venerable and princely custom of long-lying abed” Hunter, Elizabeth Cheyne, England, health, Locke, London, productivity, rest, sleep, time bic Book Industry Communication::H Humanities Elizabeth Hunter considers sleep in terms of the relationship between English medical ideas about healthy lifestyle and the social context in which idleness and the husbanding of time had powerful connotations in terms of class, gender and morality. She starts with Dekker’s The Gull’s Hornbook (1609), which took on the nocturnal habits of the “gallants” of London, before turning to the role of sleep and health in John Locke’s Some Thoughts Concerning Education (1693). Like Schmidt in Chapter 9, she draws attention to the impact of bourgeois conceptions of time and productivity on the dietetics of sleep. Her final principal source is George Cheyne, a familiar figure from many other chapters in this volume. After years of excess and late nights, Cheyne adopted a new healthy regimen and wrote about its success. The fashionability of an ostentatiously unhealthy late-night, late-rising rakish lifestyle contrasted with more puritanical bourgeois instincts and mainstream health advice, which continued to take a tough line on the poor sleep regime. Hunter shows how the “nocturnalisation” of life in cities like London created a medical/moral reaction. 2021-05-20T09:25:21Z 2021-05-20T09:25:21Z 2020 chapter 9780429465642 https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/48758 eng application/pdf Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International 9780429465642_oachapter8.pdf Taylor & Francis Lifestyle and Medicine in the Enlightenment Routledge 10.4324/9780429465642-8 10.4324/9780429465642-8 7b3c7b10-5b1e-40b3-860e-c6dd5197f0bb b2cb10a3-2f30-4897-ba03-1565de8a01a9 a4cc122a-48f4-48f2-89e4-0c75647fa784 Wellcome Trust 9780429465642 Wellcome Routledge 22 109069/Z/15/Z Queen Mary, University of London QMUL open access
|
institution |
OAPEN
|
collection |
DSpace
|
language |
English
|
description |
Elizabeth Hunter considers sleep in terms of the relationship between English medical ideas about healthy lifestyle and the social context in which idleness and the husbanding of time had powerful connotations in terms of class, gender and morality. She starts with Dekker’s The Gull’s Hornbook (1609), which took on the nocturnal habits of the “gallants” of London, before turning to the role of sleep and health in John Locke’s Some Thoughts Concerning Education (1693). Like Schmidt in Chapter 9, she draws attention to the impact of bourgeois conceptions of time and productivity on the dietetics of sleep. Her final principal source is George Cheyne, a familiar figure from many other chapters in this volume. After years of excess and late nights, Cheyne adopted a new healthy regimen and wrote about its success. The fashionability of an ostentatiously unhealthy late-night, late-rising rakish lifestyle contrasted with more puritanical bourgeois instincts and mainstream health advice, which continued to take a tough line on the poor sleep regime. Hunter shows how the “nocturnalisation” of life in cities like London created a medical/moral reaction.
|
title |
9780429465642_oachapter8.pdf
|
spellingShingle |
9780429465642_oachapter8.pdf
|
title_short |
9780429465642_oachapter8.pdf
|
title_full |
9780429465642_oachapter8.pdf
|
title_fullStr |
9780429465642_oachapter8.pdf
|
title_full_unstemmed |
9780429465642_oachapter8.pdf
|
title_sort |
9780429465642_oachapter8.pdf
|
publisher |
Taylor & Francis
|
publishDate |
2021
|
_version_ |
1771297548946898944
|