Denotation and Connotation

Sylvia A. Pamboukian
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引用次数: 6

Abstract

Research using denotation and connotation explores how words convey meaning to various audiences and illuminates phenomena such as patient resistance, structural barriers to healthcare, and the evolution of specific medical practices. Words such as cancer, natural, narcotic, botanical, palliative, consent, and many others, are ripe for such analysis because each has many denotations (definitions) and connotations (cultural associations). For example, the word digitalis may connote a pretty foxglove flower, a heart drug, or a poison. What might this mean for patients prescribed digitalis? For those who see foxglove as a safer alternative? Denotation and connotation explore how concepts in healthcare emerge, propagate, evolve, or decline within specific communities, at particular historical moments, or across eras and cultures. This chapter offers a theoretical background in literary analysis regarding denotation and connotation and describes how such analyses offer fruitful avenues for research in health humanities.
外延与内涵
使用外延和内涵的研究探讨了词语如何向不同的受众传达意义,并阐明了诸如患者抵抗、医疗保健的结构性障碍以及特定医疗实践的演变等现象。诸如癌症、自然的、麻醉的、植物学的、姑息的、同意的,以及许多其他的词,都适合进行这样的分析,因为每个词都有许多外延(定义)和内涵(文化关联)。例如,洋地黄这个词可能包含一种漂亮的毛地黄花、一种心脏药物或一种毒药。这对服用洋地黄的病人意味着什么?对于那些认为毛地黄是更安全替代品的人来说?外延和内涵探讨在医疗保健概念如何出现,传播,发展,或在特定的社区,在特定的历史时刻,或跨时代和文化的衰落。本章提供了关于外延和内涵的文学分析的理论背景,并描述了这些分析如何为健康人文学科的研究提供富有成效的途径。
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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