The Rhetoric of Healthcare and the Moral Debate About Theatre-Funded Hospitals in Early Modern Spain.

IF 16.4 1区 化学 Q1 CHEMISTRY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY Accounts of Chemical Research Pub Date : 2024-10-01 DOI:10.1007/s10912-024-09892-8
Ted L L Bergman
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Abstract

While early modern Spain may seem a world away, it is an extremely rich and relevant context for gaining a better understanding of the Rhetoric of Health, specifically the power of metaphor, in the related spheres of policy-making and public debate. It was a time and place in which the urban populace's physical well-being depended upon the fortunes of theatrical performances due to a system of alms for hospitals driven by ticket receipts. Anti-theatricalists argued that the immoral nature of theatrical performances made them spiritually and medically detrimental to society. Pro-theatricalists argued that plays were always a public good on balance because they raised much-needed funds for hospitals. Instead of producing a conflict between morality and public health, each side reinforced their connection until the two topics became nearly inseparable in the sphere of public debate. While pro-theatricalists mainly stayed with their arguments about funding hospitals, anti-theatricalists developed a new strategy of literalising the metaphor of theatre as a "plague of the republic" and arguing that immoral entertainment brought literal disease to the populace as a punishment from God. This exemplifies Stephen Pender's observation of how, in an early modern medical context, "Rhetoric as a way of perceiving probabilities and adjusting one's argument to the audience and circumstance offers a model of ethical action and interaction". This article is organised chronologically to track specific adjustments to a specific public-health debate that rely upon moral metaphors of medicine. Each side wrangled over these metaphors in an effort to break a deadlock in a public-health policy debate with entertainment, finance, and morality at its centre. By the end of the seventeenth century, anti-theatricalists finally found their best rhetorical weapon in the literalisation of the "plague of the republic" metaphor, but it only offered a short-term solution to banning theatre contingent upon the ebb and flow of epidemics. Simultaneously, the finance structure of funding hospitals began to erase the role of hospitals from the longstanding debate about the morality of public theatre. The case of early modern Spain provides valuable lessons about the power of metaphor in the Rhetoric of Healthcare that are still applicable today.

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现代早期西班牙的医疗修辞学和关于剧院资助医院的道德争论》(The Rhetoric of Healthcare and the Moral Debate About The Theater-Funded Hospitals in Early Modern Spain)。
现代早期的西班牙看似遥远,但对于更好地理解健康修辞学,特别是隐喻在相关决策和公共辩论领域的力量,却是一个极其丰富和相关的背景。在那个时代和那个地方,城市居民的身体健康取决于戏剧演出的收入,因为医院的施舍系统是由门票收入驱动的。反戏剧论者认为,戏剧表演的不道德性使其在精神上和医学上对社会有害。支持戏剧的人则认为,总的来说,戏剧始终是一种公益事业,因为它们为医院筹集了急需的资金。双方非但没有在道德和公共卫生之间产生冲突,反而加强了它们之间的联系,直到这两个话题在公共辩论领域几乎密不可分。支持戏剧的人主要停留在为医院提供资金的论点上,而反对戏剧的人则发展出一种新的策略,将戏剧比喻为 "共和国的瘟疫",认为不道德的娱乐活动给民众带来了疾病,是上帝的惩罚。斯蒂芬-彭德(Stephen Pender)认为,在现代早期的医学背景下,"修辞作为一种感知可能性的方式,并根据观众和环境调整自己的论点,为道德行动和互动提供了一种模式",这一点在本文中得到了很好的体现。本文按时间顺序编排,以追踪特定公共卫生辩论中的具体调整,这些调整依赖于医学的道德隐喻。双方都在这些隐喻上争论不休,试图打破以娱乐、金融和道德为中心的公共卫生政策辩论的僵局。到 17 世纪末,反戏剧主义者终于在 "共和国瘟疫 "隐喻的字面意义上找到了他们最好的修辞武器,但这只是根据流行病的起伏来禁止戏剧的短期解决方案。与此同时,资助医院的财政结构开始将医院的作用从有关公共戏剧道德的长期争论中抹去。现代早期西班牙的案例为医疗保健修辞中隐喻的力量提供了宝贵的经验,这些经验在今天依然适用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Accounts of Chemical Research
Accounts of Chemical Research 化学-化学综合
CiteScore
31.40
自引率
1.10%
发文量
312
审稿时长
2 months
期刊介绍: Accounts of Chemical Research presents short, concise and critical articles offering easy-to-read overviews of basic research and applications in all areas of chemistry and biochemistry. These short reviews focus on research from the author’s own laboratory and are designed to teach the reader about a research project. In addition, Accounts of Chemical Research publishes commentaries that give an informed opinion on a current research problem. Special Issues online are devoted to a single topic of unusual activity and significance. Accounts of Chemical Research replaces the traditional article abstract with an article "Conspectus." These entries synopsize the research affording the reader a closer look at the content and significance of an article. Through this provision of a more detailed description of the article contents, the Conspectus enhances the article's discoverability by search engines and the exposure for the research.
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