《黑人少女时代的全球历史》由Corinne T. Field和LaKisha Michelle Simmons编辑

IF 0.3 4区 历史学 Q2 HISTORY Journal of Interdisciplinary History Pub Date : 2023-06-01 DOI:10.1162/jinh_r_01954
J. Jordan-Zachery
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引用次数: 0

摘要

从而使欧洲人走向工业革命的道路“非具体化或去特殊化”(22)。尽管如此,《瘟疫制造的世界》在重新思考流行病灾难在人类历史上的作用的多学科努力中是有用的。Belich正确地宣称,经济史在历史学家中并没有占据足够的分析地位,尽管它是“历史的核心。他们是否肚子里有食物,背上有衣服,头顶有屋顶,对过去的人来说很重要,对我们来说也应该很重要”(446)。大多数医学、传染病、灾难研究和公共卫生历史学家仍然没有充分关注前现代流行病死亡率的经济驱动因素,包括巨大的地方卫生挑战的结构性和差异性成本。但贝利奇本人避免将自己的论文与历史人口学家最近的学术成果纠缠在一起,而是缩小篇幅,描述了仅在“第一次瘟疫时代”至1500年左右修复人口数量的失败斗争,以及在“第二次瘟疫代年”国内一线工作人口的再次贫困。劳动者通常会在大流行病之后受益。发病率和死亡率负担向劳动人民转移是否反映了投资者和土地所有者全面恢复经济权力?或者,地区大瘟疫和其他疾病的曲线球决定了被黑死病选择性击倒的地区的赢家和输家?Belich不相信最近的环境和气候历史,这些历史挑战了他在最初的黑死病浪潮中构建的鼠疫杆菌在地理上均匀传播的结构,对当地的非人类生态参数漠不关心。他典型的细粒度论点也以引人入胜但完全兼收并蓄的阅读方式展开,阅读了受选定科学证据约束的现有文献证据。文本不受图形或表格总结的影响,部分由精美的地图补偿。总的来说,他的综合报告以书面证据为基础,通过对一系列关于黑死病的长期历史辩论的一些科学“答案”进行验证,突显了瘟疫科学家和传统瘟疫历史学家之间的认识论鸿沟。
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The Global History of Black Girlhood edited by Corinne T. Field and LaKisha Michelle Simmons
carries and thus to “un-reify, or de-exceptionalize” Europeans’ path to the Industrial Revolution (22). The World the Plague Made is nonetheless useful in the multidisciplinary effort to re-think the role of pandemic disasters in human history. Belich claims, rightly, that economic history has not occupied sufficient analytical prominence among historians in general, though it is “the very guts of history. Whether they had food in their bellies, clothes on their backs, and roofs over their heads mattered to people in the past, and it should matter to us” (446). Most historians of medicine, infectious diseases, disaster studies, and public health still pay insufficient attention to the economic drivers of epidemic mortality in premodern eras, including the structural and differential costs of huge endemic health challenges. But Belich himself avoids entangling his own thesis with recent scholarship from historical demographers, zooming out instead to delineate an unsuccessful struggle to repair human numbers only during the “first plague era” to c. 1500 and a renewed impoverishment of home-front working populations in the “second plague era.” Laborers typically benefit in the aftermath of great epidemics. Does the shifting burden of morbidity and mortality to working people reflect a return of full economic power to investors and landowners? Or do regional great plagues and other disease curveballs determine winners and losers within the regions selectively felled by the Black Death? Belich is not convinced by recent environmental and climate histories that challenge his construction of a geographically uniform spread of Y. pestis in the initial Black Death wave, indifferent to local nonhuman ecological parameters. His characteristically granular arguments also unfold with a fascinating but fully eclectic reading of available documentary evidence constrained by selected scientific evidence. The text is unrelieved by graphic or tabular summation, partly compensated by splendid maps. Overall, his synthesis, resting on written evidence validated by some scientific “answers” to a set of long-standing historical debates about the Black Death, highlights the epistemological chasm between plague scientists and traditional plague historians.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
20.00%
发文量
68
期刊介绍: The Journal of Interdisciplinary History features substantive articles, research notes, review essays, and book reviews relating historical research and work in applied fields-such as economics and demographics. Spanning all geographical areas and periods of history, topics include: - social history - demographic history - psychohistory - political history - family history - economic history - cultural history - technological history
期刊最新文献
Marriage, Separation & Divorce in England, 1500–1700 by K. J. Kesselring and Tim Stretton Wealth, Poverty, and Charity in Jewish Antiquity by Gregg E. Gardner The Folds of Olympus: Mountains in Ancient Greek and Roman Culture by Jason König The Pope at War: The Secret History of Pius XII, Mussolini, and Hitler by David I. Kertzer Victorians and Numbers: Statistics and Society in Nineteenth Century Britain by Lawrence Goldman
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