The Girl Who Lived on Air

The Mystery of Sarah Jacob: The Welsh Fasting Girl

Nonfiction, Health & Well Being, Health, Ailments & Diseases, Social & Cultural Studies, True Crime
Cover of the book The Girl Who Lived on Air by Stephen Wade, Seren
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Stephen Wade ISBN: 9781781720707
Publisher: Seren Publication: July 1, 2014
Imprint: Seren Language: English
Author: Stephen Wade
ISBN: 9781781720707
Publisher: Seren
Publication: July 1, 2014
Imprint: Seren
Language: English

Though not the first anorexic, Sarah Jacob, “the Welsh fasting girl,” was arguably the first to cause a national uproar when she dominated the press in 1869, becoming something of a celebrity. Despite a team of nurses from Guy’s Hospital stationed at her home in Lletherneuadd, Sarah died, and the best minds in British medicine theorized about the cause of her apparently supernatural existence: living in spite of starvation. This human story shows how Sarah was made to be the center of a lucrative and media-hungry “spin” on the 19th-century nexus of knowledge between science and superstition, folk-belief and religious asceticism. New ground is covered in examining the medical issues surrounding the case, the legal complexities, and the interpretation of a newly enacted law that reformulated serious crime, the prison life of Sarah’s parents—who were convicted of manslaughter—and the significance of folklore and superstition in an unusual and yet all-too-familiar story.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Though not the first anorexic, Sarah Jacob, “the Welsh fasting girl,” was arguably the first to cause a national uproar when she dominated the press in 1869, becoming something of a celebrity. Despite a team of nurses from Guy’s Hospital stationed at her home in Lletherneuadd, Sarah died, and the best minds in British medicine theorized about the cause of her apparently supernatural existence: living in spite of starvation. This human story shows how Sarah was made to be the center of a lucrative and media-hungry “spin” on the 19th-century nexus of knowledge between science and superstition, folk-belief and religious asceticism. New ground is covered in examining the medical issues surrounding the case, the legal complexities, and the interpretation of a newly enacted law that reformulated serious crime, the prison life of Sarah’s parents—who were convicted of manslaughter—and the significance of folklore and superstition in an unusual and yet all-too-familiar story.

More books from Seren

Cover of the book Return to Hendre Ddu by Stephen Wade
Cover of the book Boy Running by Stephen Wade
Cover of the book Clueless Dogs by Stephen Wade
Cover of the book Inroads by Stephen Wade
Cover of the book Significance by Stephen Wade
Cover of the book Star-Shot by Stephen Wade
Cover of the book Museum of Disappearing Sounds by Stephen Wade
Cover of the book Way the Crocodile Taught Me by Stephen Wade
Cover of the book Road to Zagora by Stephen Wade
Cover of the book The Flying Trapeze by Stephen Wade
Cover of the book She Inserts the Key by Stephen Wade
Cover of the book To Bodies Gone by Stephen Wade
Cover of the book Scattering by Stephen Wade
Cover of the book Small Country by Stephen Wade
Cover of the book Pumping Up Napoleon by Stephen Wade
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy