The Expressiveness of the Body and the Divergence of Greek and Chinese Medicine – Shigehisa Kuriyama – 1999, Zone Books
What the Book Explores
Shigehisa Kuriyama’s The Expressiveness of the Body and the Divergence of Greek and Chinese Medicine is a comparative study of medical thought in ancient Greece and China. It does not focus on the differing diagnoses or treatments employed by these traditions, but rather on the fundamental *ways* in which each understood the human body itself. Kuriyama argues that each medical system developed around a distinct “body schema” – a culturally shaped understanding of the body’s internal workings and its capacity for expressing disharmony. The Greek model, he posits, centered on the body as a composition of interacting forces and fluids, with disease manifesting as imbalances visible through external symptoms. The Chinese model, conversely, emphasized the body’s intrinsic capacity to *express* internal states, with the body itself being a landscape of signs that revealed the nature of illness.
Historical / Cultural Context
Published in 1999, this work emerged from a growing scholarly interest in comparative history and the history of medicine. Kuriyama’s approach departs from traditional narratives that often position Greek medicine as the direct ancestor of Western medical thought, implicitly suggesting a trajectory of progress. Instead, he presents these two systems as equally sophisticated but fundamentally different responses to the human condition. The book draws on a deep engagement with classical Chinese texts, including the Huangdi Neijing (Yellow Emperor’s Inner Canon), and ancient Greek medical writings, such as those of Hippocrates and Galen. Its importance lies in its demonstration of how culture shapes not merely *what* we think about the body, but *how* we think about it, and consequently, how we practice medicine. The work implicitly challenges ethnocentric biases in the study of medicine and promotes a more nuanced appreciation of non-Western healing traditions.
Who This Book Is For
This book is primarily intended for readers with an academic interest in the history of medicine, comparative philosophy, and East Asian studies. However, its accessible style and insightful arguments also make it valuable for those interested in cultural history, anthropology, and the relationship between medicine and culture. Prior knowledge of either Greek or Chinese medicine is not required, though a general familiarity with classical thought will be helpful. The book’s examination of differing perceptions of the body also resonates with those interested in the psychology of perception and embodied cognition. It is not a practical guide to medical treatment, but rather a conceptual exploration of different ways of knowing the body.
Further Reading
- Foucault, Michel. The Birth of the Clinic. (1963) – A foundational work in the history of medicine, examining the rise of clinical observation and the medical gaze.
- Nutton, Vivian. Ancient Medicine. (1985) – A comprehensive overview of Greek medicine, providing essential historical context.
- Unschuld, Paul U. Medicine in China: A History of Pharmaceutics. (1985) – Offers a detailed examination of the historical development of Chinese medicine.
Disclaimer.
Oraclepedia is an independent educational and cultural project. The material presented explores myths, belief systems, symbolic traditions, and aspects of human perception from historical, cultural, and psychological perspectives.
Content is provided for informational and reflective purposes only and does not promote specific beliefs, spiritual practices, or ideological positions. Interpretations presented reflect scholarly, cultural, or symbolic analysis rather than factual claims about the natural world.
