Immaculate Forms, Helen King
Immaculate Forms, Helen King
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Immaculate Forms
A History of the Female Body in Four Parts

Author: Helen King

Narrator: Elaine Claxton

Unabridged: 15 hr 10 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Basic Books

Published: 01/28/2025


Synopsis

The turbulent history of women’s bodies, from classical Greece to the modern day

Breasts, clitoris, hymen, and womb. Across history, these body parts have told women who they are and what they should do. Although knowledge of each part has changed through time, none of them tells a simple story. The way they work and in some cases even their existence have been debated. They can be seen as powerful or as disgusting, as relevant only to reproduction or as sources of sexual pleasure.  
  
In Immaculate Forms, classicist and historian Helen King explores the symbiotic relationship between religion and medicine and their twinned history of gatekeeping over these key organs that have been used to define “woman,” illustrating how conceptions of women’s bodies have owed more to imagination and myth than to observation and science. Throughout history, the way we understand the body has always been debated, and it is still shaped by human intervention and read according to cultural interpretations.  
  
Astute and engaging, Immaculate Forms is for everyone who has wondered what history has to say about today’s raging debates over the human body and who is “really” female.

Reviews

Goodreads review by Mackenzie on December 26, 2024

Immaculate Forms is an incredible work and an obvious labor of love. King comes at her "four parts" from a societal and linguistic lens- diving into how society (almost exclusively men in power) viewed these specific areas. The Breast portion was probably some of my favorite academic writing I have......more

Goodreads review by Janejellyroll on January 29, 2025

Wow, what a book! It would have been very easy for a book on this topic to either slide into smugness about the errors people in previous generations made in thinking about our bodies or a useless essentialism. But King was very alert to these possibilities and was able to avoid them. There's a ton......more

Goodreads review by Lindsay on March 28, 2025

I’m always fascinated to see how history represents women across the ages and immaculate forms did an amazing job representing the four body parts that define women (the breast, clitoris, hymen, and womb) in tracing their history. I appreciated the inclusivity author Helen King included in her narrat......more

Goodreads review by Lizzie on March 09, 2025

There are two main takeaways from this book. The first is that everything we know – and think we know – about our bodies must always be viewed through a cultural and, by extension, a historical lens. The second is that there really is no such thing as a true sex binary, and that any attempts to defi......more

Goodreads review by Nico on March 06, 2025

Of all the books on the female body (Angier, Hazard, Bohannon) I liked this one the most. The author tells us how the female body was viewed in history, with an emphasis on Greek and Roman interpretations. Being an expert in ancient medical texts, King points out many errors seeping through in even......more


Quotes

“In Immaculate Forms, Dr Helen King expertly weaves science, history, and culture to illuminate history and educate about the most misunderstood parts of our bodies. There is no better guide to trace the history of what we know and to make it relevant for us today. Never has medical history been more entertaining! Impeccably researched, thoroughly enjoyable, and filled with moments of surprise, this book will astound. Immaculate Forms is not just essential reading for those interested in science; it should be read by anyone interested in understanding how disinformation about women's bodies comes to be and how it can be exploited.” —Dr. Jennifer Gunter, author of The Vagina Bible

“Delightful, timely and critical. If cognitive science has taught us anything, it's that our imagination of the future is built from our memories of the past. Helen King is here to give us some better material to build with. The history of women's bodies isn't nearly what you think it is, nor the history of "womanhood" itself.”—Cat Bohannon, author of Eve

“With erudition and cool wit, Helen King anatomises three millennia of Western commentary from doctors, teachers and theologians about the female body. Males have tended to do most of the talking; now readers across the gender spectrum can find surprises and illuminations in this entertainingly comprehensive survey of what past generations knew, thought they knew, and often got wildly wrong.”—Diarmaid MacCulloch, author of A History of Christianity

Immaculate Forms is also a work of immaculate writing. With unrivaled expertise and a wealth of classical and contemporary detail, the author weaves historical knowledge of medicine, anatomy, literature, art and religion into a narrative that surprises, informs, excites and frequently amuses. Essential reading for busting prejudice and myth about women and their bodies.”—Adrian Thatcher, author of Vile Bodies