Helen King (born 1957) is a British classical scholar and advocate for the medical humanities.[1] She is Professor Emerita of Classical Studies at the Open University.[2] She was previously Professor of the History of Classical Medicine and Head of the Department of Classics at the University of Reading.[3]
Having completed her doctorate, King held research fellowships at the universities of Cambridge and Newcastle, taught at the Liverpool Institute of Higher Education for eight years, and moved to Reading on a Wellcome Trust University Award in 1996. From 2008 she was also visiting professor at the Peninsula Medical School in Truro. She moved to the Open University to assume the role of Professor of Classical Studies in 2011. She retired in January 2017 and took up the position of Robert E. and Susan T. Rydell Visiting Professor 2017–2018 at Gustavus Adolphus College, St Peter, MN.[6]
King was a Women's Studies Area Advisor to the Oxford Classical Dictionary (1996). She has been a Fellow at the Netherlands Institute for Advanced Studies (2001), a Landsdowne Visiting Lecturer at the University of Victoria, British Columbia (2002), a visiting professor at the University of Texas at Austin (2005), a Käthe Leichter Visiting Professor in Women's Studies and Gender Studies at the University of Vienna (2014)[7] and Provost's Distinguished Women Lecturer, Notre Dame, IN (2016).[8] King has appeared on History Cold Case, Tony Robinson's Gods & Monsters, and Harlots, Housewives & Heroines: A 17th Century History for Girls.[9] She has contributed to two episodes of In Our Time on BBC Radio 4, speaking on Galen[10] and The Hippocratic Oath[11] and three episodes of Being Roman, also on Radio 4, with Mary Beard.
Research interests
In September 2024 King published Immaculate Forms: Uncovering the History of Women's Bodies. Her book Hippocrates' Woman: Reading the Female Body in Ancient Greece (1998)[12] analyses the practice and theory of ancient medicine as relating to women and how it continues to influence thought to the present day. Immaculate Forms focuses on a similarly broad time period and investigates changing beliefs about the breasts, clitoris, hymen and womb.
In her 2007 book, Midwifery, Obstetrics and the Rise of Gynaecology: The Uses of a Sixteenth-Century Compendium, she examined the uses of ancient medicine in a collection of ancient and medieval works on gynecology produced in three editions, the last being in 1597 by Israel Spach, and the different interpretations of this collection up to James Young Simpson in the nineteenth century.[13]
She has also published on the myths of Tithonos,[14] on mermaids,[15] and on the myth/fable of Agnodice, "the first midwife".[16] She has investigated how this story was used to give authority to women in medical roles in various historical periods.[17]
Midwifery, Obstetrics and the Rise of Gynaecology: The Uses of a Sixteenth-Century Compendium (2007); ISBN9780754653967
Blood, Sweat and Tears: The Changing Concepts of Physiology from Antiquity into Early Modern Europe (with Manfred Horstmansoff and Claus Zittel 2012); ISBN978-90-04-22918-1[26]
La Médecine dans l' Antiquité grecque et romaine (with Véronique Dasen, 2008); ISBN9782970053668
The One-Sex Body on Trial: The Classical and Early Modern Evidence (2013); ISBN978-1-4094-6335-1[27]
Hippocrates Now: The 'Father of Medicine' in the Internet Age (2019); ISBN9781350005891[28]
Immaculate Forms: Uncovering the History of Women's Bodies (2024) ISBN 9781788163873