Where Paralytics Walk and the Blind See

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A01=Mary Dunn
Abscess
Agape
Ambiguity
Anesthesia
Anointing of the Sick
Auditory hallucination
Author_Mary Dunn
Baptism
Breast pain
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Chest pain
Cloister
Colic
Counter-Reformation
Cutaneous condition
Depression (mood)
Disability
Disability studies
Disease
Doctrine
Dysentery
Elaine Scarry
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eq_history
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Eucharistic theology
Euthanasia
Exorcism
Futile medical care
God Alone
Gout
Grief
Hatred
Healing
Human body
Idiosyncrasy
Imprimatur
Indication (medicine)
Inflammation
Knights Hospitaller
Leprosy
Malaria
Mastitis
Medical advice
Medical diagnosis
Medical model
Medicine
Medicine man
Motley crew
Narrative
Narrative medicine
Neglect
Neuropsychology
Nursing
Palliative care
Paralysis
Peripheral nervous system
Persecution
Physical disability
Physician
Pity
Recovery from blindness
Relic
Self-denial
Society of Jesus
Surgery
Swelling (medical)
The Interpretation of Dreams
The Jesuit Relations
Theology
Therapy
Thought
Topical medication
Ulcer (dermatology)
Verisimilitude

Product details

  • ISBN 9780691233598
  • Dimensions: 140 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 17 Feb 2026
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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An exploration of early modern accounts of sickness and disability—and what they tell us about our own approach to bodily difference

In our age of biomedicine, society often treats sickness and disability as problems in need of solution. Phenomena of embodied difference, however, have not always been seen in terms of lack and loss. Where Paralytics Walk and the Blind See explores the case of early modern Catholic Canada under French rule and shows it to be a period rich with alternative understandings of infirmity, disease, and death. Counternarratives to our contemporary assumptions, these early modern stories invite us to creatively imagine ways of living meaningfully with embodied difference today.

At the heart of Dunn’s account are a range of historical sources: Jesuit stories of illness in New France, an account of Canada’s first hospital, the hagiographic vita of Catherine de Saint-Augustin, and tales of miraculous healings wrought by a dead Franciscan friar. In an early modern world that subscribed to a Christian view of salvation, both sickness and disability held significance for more than the body, opening opportunities for virtue, charity, and even redemption. Dunn demonstrates that when these reflections collide with modern thinking, the effect is a certain kind of freedom to reimagine what sickness and disability might mean to us.

Reminding us that the meanings we make of embodied difference are historically conditioned, Where Paralytics Walk and the Blind See makes a forceful case for the role of history in broadening our imagination.

Mary Dunn is associate professor of early modern Christianity at Saint Louis University. Her books include The Cruelest of All Mothers and Religious Intimacies.

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