'They might as well brand us': working-class resistance to compulsory vaccination in Victorian England.

Nadja Durbach
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引用次数: 128

Abstract

From its origins in resistance to the 1853 Compulsory Vaccination Act, the Victorian anti-vaccination movement successfully challenged the public health policies of an increasingly interventionist state. Anti-vaccinationists were not only middle-class reformers, but were also drawn from a politically active working class. These campaigners saw compulsory vaccination as an extreme example of class legislation, for its policy and administration implicitly targeted working-class infants and inflicted multiple penalties on a public who considered themselves 'conscientious objectors'. Anti-vaccinationism was quickly absorbed into English working-class culture. Indeed, it helped to reorganize working-class identities around the site of the vulnerable body thereby absorbing many people into a working class who interpreted the violation of their bodies as a form of political tyranny. Participation in this movement was, however, also an exclusive exercise for anti-vaccinators, as respectable working-class citizens distinguished themselves from members of the 'undeserving' classes. This paper explores the class nature of the Vaccination Acts, their relationship to the New Poor Law, and the political implications of their administration. It also imbeds anti-vaccinationism firmly within working-class culture, illustrating the campaign's relationship to popular protest and entertainment, and this legislation's impact upon working-class bodies.
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“他们还不如给我们打上烙印”:维多利亚时代英国工人阶级对强制接种疫苗的抵制。
从对1853年强制疫苗接种法案的抵制开始,维多利亚时代的反疫苗运动成功地挑战了一个日益干预的国家的公共卫生政策。反对接种疫苗的人不仅是中产阶级改革者,也来自政治上活跃的工人阶级。这些活动家认为强制接种疫苗是阶级立法的一个极端例子,因为它的政策和管理含蓄地针对工薪阶层的婴儿,并对那些认为自己是“良心拒服兵役者”的公众施加了多重惩罚。反疫苗主义很快被英国工人阶级文化所吸收。事实上,它有助于围绕脆弱的身体重新组织工人阶级的身份,从而将许多人纳入工人阶级,他们将对他们身体的侵犯解释为一种政治暴政。然而,参与这一运动也是反接种者的专属活动,因为受人尊敬的工人阶级公民将自己与“不值得”接种的阶级成员区分开来。本文探讨了《预防接种法案》的阶级性质,它们与《新济贫法》的关系,以及它们的管理的政治含义。它还将反疫苗主义牢牢地嵌入工人阶级文化中,说明了这场运动与大众抗议和娱乐的关系,以及这项立法对工人阶级身体的影响。
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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