Megan Nutzman, Assistant Professor of History, Old Dominion University.
Contested Cures is an ambitious, empirically rigorous, and theoretically sophisticated interdisciplinary book which decenters the voices of ancient intellectual elites and focuses instead on the lived experience of ordinary people who drew freely upon a range of shared ritual objects, practices, and specialists to ameliorate their physical and psychic suffering. --Elizabeth Castelli, Barnard College Contested Cures is an exceptional work of scholarship on healing practices in the Roman world. Nutzman's regional focus on Roman Palestine, along with her judicious comparative methodology, allow her not only to resist the conventional impulse to study rituals of healing within silos of religious tradition, but also to challenge facile distinctions among the domains of religion, magic, and medicine. What emerges is a fascinating and compelling portrait of how the diverse inhabitants of the region turned for treatment to similar--and, in many cases, the very same--objects, places, and people, even as religious elites sought to segment this shared therapeutic landscape and thus to police the boundaries between communities. --Ra'anan Boustan, Research Scholar, Princeton University