从Lebensreform到Swadeshi

Q2 Arts and Humanities Asian Medicine Pub Date : 2020-11-19 DOI:10.1163/15734218-12341463
J. Alter
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引用次数: 1

摘要

在印度,自然疗法作为一种制度化的“本土”医学体系,直接源于在“生活改革”(Lebensreform)的名义下发展起来的思想和实践。“生活改革”是一种激进的、回归自然的健康改革运动,形成于19世纪末和20世纪初的中欧。自然疗法发展于20世纪的印度,是Swadeshi的深刻体现,Swadeshi是一场与独立和解放密切相关的社会、文化和反殖民主义政治运动。Lebensreform和Swadeshi之间的重要相似之处指向了基于阶级习惯和全球反文化实践的医学理解。本文以19世纪初阿道夫·贾斯特(Adolf Just)和其他德国人的作品为例,并以1940年由维塔尔·达斯·莫迪(Vithal Das Modi)在戈拉克布尔(Gorakhpur)建立的自然治疗医院Arogya Mandir为例,探讨了“生存改革”(Lebensreform)的激进乌托邦理想如何被转化为制度化的医疗实践,从而促进了Swadeshi作为殖民地印度卫生改革政治哲学的体现。
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From Lebensreform to Swadeshi
As an institutionalized “indigenous” system of medicine in India, nature cure derives directly from ideas and practices developed within the rubric of Lebensreform, a radical, back-to-nature health reform movement that took shape in late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century central Europe. Nature cure developed in twentieth-century India as a deeply embodied manifestation of Swadeshi, a social, cultural, and anticolonial political movement intimately concerned with independence and liberation. Significant parallels between Lebensreform and Swadeshi point toward an understanding of medicine based on the habitus of class and global countercultural practices. Using examples from the work of Adolf Just and other Germans writing at the turn of the nineteenth century and the case of Arogya Mandir, a nature cure hospital established by Vithal Das Modi in Gorakhpur in 1940, this essay examines how the radical, utopian ideals of Lebensreform were translated into institutionalized medical practice that facilitated the embodiment of Swadeshi as a political philosophy of health reform in colonial India.
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来源期刊
Asian Medicine
Asian Medicine Arts and Humanities-Arts and Humanities (all)
CiteScore
2.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
12
期刊介绍: Asian Medicine -Tradition and Modernity is a multidisciplinary journal aimed at researchers and practitioners of Asian Medicine in Asia as well as in Western countries. It makes available in one single publication academic essays that explore the historical, anthropological, sociological and philological dimensions of Asian medicine as well as practice reports from clinicians based in Asia and in Western countries. With the recent upsurge of interest in non-Western alternative approaches to health care, Asian Medicine - Tradition and Modernity will be of relevance to those studying the modifications and adaptations of traditional medical systems on their journey to non-Asian settings.
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