霍乱与19世纪日本的环境

W. Johnston
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引用次数: 1

摘要

摘要:在急性传染病中,霍乱在日本流行文化和决策者中比其他任何疾病都更受关注。尽管霍乱历史存在的许多事实似乎已经确定,但当人们仔细观察医学、生物学和环境科学时,其中一些事实——尤其是关于流行病、流行病和地方性的定义——变得模糊了。为了达到一点明确性,这篇文章问道:是什么生物和环境条件导致霍乱在19世纪的日本流行?在回答这个问题时,它表明,了解这种疾病的历史,更具体地说,它为什么会像在19世纪的日本那样学习,需要了解科学文献。这一说法是一个更广泛争论的一部分,即通过生物和环境科学了解具体表现的物理世界对理解人类历史至关重要。它不仅适用于疾病史、流行病和流行病,还适用于其他领域,包括环境史、技术史和战争史。这篇文章还质疑了许多界限:学科之间,跨越时间和空间,以及我们所认为的事实中的证据和假设之间。
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Cholera and the Environment in Nineteenth-Century Japan
abstract:Among acute infectious diseases, cholera gained more attention in Japanese popular culture and among policymakers than any other. Although many facts about cholera's historical existence seem settled, when one looks closely at the medical, biological, and environmental science, several of these facts—especially about the definitions of pandemics, epidemics, and endemicity—become fuzzy. In an attempt to reach a modicum of clarity, this article asks: What biological and environmental conditions allowed cholera to become endemic in nineteenth-century Japan? In answering this question, it makes the case that understanding this disease in history and, more specifically, why it took the course that it did in nineteenth-century Japan requires knowledge of the scientific literature. This claim is part of a broader argument about how understanding the physical world in its concrete manifestations through biological and environmental science is important to understanding human history. It is applicable not only to the history of disease, epidemics, and pandemics but to other fields, including environmental history, the history of technology, and the history of war, as well. This article also questions a number of boundaries: between disciplines, across time and space, and between evidence and assumption in what we consider facts.
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