TY - JOUR A1 - Tarrant, Neil PB - OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC JF - Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences VL - 77 SP - 477 N2 - In this work, John Christopoulos draws on a range of perspectives from medical, social, religious, and legal history to offer a rich, engaging, and detailed account of the history of abortion in early modern Italy. Handling his subject matter with care and sensitivity, he reconstructs how early modern Italians thought about and responded to women?s bodies and the experiences of pregnancy, childbirth, stillbirth, and abortion. The latter category, Christopoulos explains, encompassed not only the deliberate termination of pregnancy, but also situations in which the pregnancy was ended by accident or by violence inflicted by another party. The book is structured around three main chapters which respectively treat the themes of medical, religious, and legal responses to abortion. They are each separated by a short story drawn from the archives that provides a case study to illustrate the themes of the foregoing chapter. UR - https://doi.org/10.1093/jhmas/jrac036 ID - discovery10196560 Y1 - 2022/10// N1 - This version is the author-accepted manuscript. For information on re-use, please refer to the publisher?s terms and conditions. IS - 4 EP - 478 TI - John Christopoulos, Abortion in Early Modern Italy. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2021. 368 pp. SN - 0022-5045 AV - public ER -