Yvonne Petry

Contact Info
Research Interests
- Renaissance and Reformation
- 16th Century France
- Women and Gender
- Witch Hunts
- Early Modern Science and Medicine
Short Bio
Yvonne Petry is an Professor of History at Luther College at the University of Regina, where she has taught since 1998. She is a specialist in the history of early modern France, with a particular interest in the relationship between magic, religion and medicine in the late sixteenth century. Her work explores the intellectual boundaries of early modern thought. She has also published in the area of gender and Kabbalah in Renaissance France and collaborated on an interdisciplinary examination of social constructions of religion and science.
Research
Current research is focused on the French medical establishment from 1560-1650 and the attitudes of early modern physicians regarding magic, witchcraft and demonic possession. She is working on a monograph entitled Illness and Infection in the Era of the European Witchcraft. This study examines the ways in which physicians and surgeons tried to understand physical and mental illness in an era when the role of the preternatural and supernatural realms in causing disease and distorting sense perception was widely accepted. She has presented her research at annual conferences of the Sixteenth Century Studies Society, the Renaissance Society of America, the Centre for Renaissance and Reformation Studies (Toronto) and the Southern Association for the History of Medicine and Science.
Courses Taught
HIST 115: Issues in European History
HIST 270: Europe, 1400-1648: Renaissance and Reformation
HIST 271: Health, Disease and the Body: The History of Medicine in Western Culture
HIST 272: Gender and the Body in Early Modern Europe
HIST 370: The European Reformations
HIST 373: The European Witch Hunts
HIST 400: Theories of History
HIST 472: From Magic to Science: The Evolution of Early Modern European Thought
Selected Publications
“’What do they mean by a potent man?’ Medical Views of Impotence in Early Modern France,” (co-authored with Kiegan Lloyd), in The Male Body and Social Masculinity in Premodern Europe, ed. Jacqueline Murray. Toronto: Centre for Renaissance and Reformation Studies, 2022. 93-112.
Translation of excerpt from Guillaume Postel, De la république des Turcs, là où l’occasion s’offrera, des moeurs, loy de tous les Muhamédistes (Poitiers: Enguilbert de Marnef, 1560, 44-57) in Global Reformations Sourcebook: Convergence, Conversion, and Conflict, ed. Nicholas Terpstra. London/New York, Routledge, 2021. Section 3.1, “Can Christians, Jews, and Muslims learn anything from each others? (1560).” 67-70.
“The Peregrinations of Guillaume Postel: Journey, Religious Syncretism and Prophecy,” in Reframing Reformation: Understanding Religious Difference in Early Modern Europe, ed. Nicholas Terpstra. Toronto: Centre for Renaissance and Reformation Studies, 2020. 261-280.
“Event Series: Luther College, University of Regina” [Reflections on the 500th Anniversary of the Reformation] Sixteenth Century Journal 48, no.4 (2017), 1017-1018.
"Vision, Medicine and Magic: Bewitchment and Lovesickness in Jacques Grévin’s Deux Livres des vénins (1568).”In Religion and the Senses in Early Modern Europe. Eds. Wietse de Boer and Christine Göttler. Leiden/Boston: Brill, 2013. 455-472.
“Many Things Surpass our Knowledge’: An Early Modern Surgeon on Magic, Witchcraft and Demonic Possession.” Social History of Medicine 25 (2012): 47-64.
Gender, Kabbalah and the Catholic Reformation: The Mystical Theology of Guillaume Postel (1510-1581). Leiden: Brill, 2004.
Webs of Reality: Social Perspectives on Science and Religion, co-authored with William Stahl, Robert Campbell and Gary Diver. Piscatawy, NJ: Rutgers, 2002.