节律史:迈向健康和医学史的新研究议程

IF 0.5 4区 哲学 Q3 HISTORY & PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE
Kristin D. Hussey
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引用次数: 1

摘要

节奏是地球上生命的特征。饮食和禁食、睡眠和清醒、活动和休息的日常生理节律,是几乎所有在日光-黑暗循环下进化的生命形式所共有的。尽管它们无处不在,但健康和医学的历史学家们还没有与过去这些日常节奏的生活经历作斗争。本文提出了一个潜在的新的研究议程“节奏史”,将节奏理解为生物学和文化之间的东西。用节奏思考提供了令人兴奋的机会,可以将以前对饮食和睡眠等日常节奏的不同历史研究结合起来,并开辟了一种新的方式来看待身体与环境之间的错综复杂的联系。在本文中,我从德国时间生物学家j rgen Aschoff创造的“授时者”(“时间给予者”)的科学概念中获得灵感,对当前与节奏有关的文献进行了回顾,并探索了亨利·列斐伏尔的“节奏分析”概念,作为历史学家进行“节奏史”的方法论工具。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Rhythmic history: Towards a new research agenda for the history of health and medicine

Rhythm characterizes life on Earth. Daily physiological rhythms of eating and fasting, sleeping and waking, moving and resting, are common to almost all life forms which evolved under the solar light–dark cycle. Despite their ubiquity, historians of health and medicine have yet to grapple with the lived experiences of these daily rhythms in the past. This paper presents a potential new research agenda in ‘rhythmic history’ that understands rhythmicity as something which lies between biology and culture. Thinking with rhythms offers exciting opportunities to unite previously disparate historical studies of daily rhythms like eating and sleeping and opens up a new way to view the enmeshed connections between body and environment. In this paper, I take inspiration from the scientific concept of the ‘zeitgeber’ (‘time giver’), coined by the German chronobiologist Jürgen Aschoff, to frame a review of current literature relating to rhythms and explore Henry Lefebvre’s notion of ‘rhythmanalysis’ as a methodological tool for historians undertaking ‘rhythmic histories’.

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来源期刊
Endeavour
Endeavour 综合性期刊-科学史与科学哲学
CiteScore
1.10
自引率
16.70%
发文量
19
审稿时长
49 days
期刊介绍: Endeavour, established in 1942, has, over its long and proud history, developed into one of the leading journals in the history and philosophy of science. Endeavour publishes high-quality articles on a wide array of scientific topics from ancient to modern, across all disciplines. It serves as a critical forum for the interdisciplinary exploration and evaluation of natural knowledge and its development throughout history. Each issue contains lavish color and black-and-white illustrations. This makes Endeavour an ideal destination for history and philosophy of science articles with a strong visual component. Endeavour presents the history and philosophy of science in a clear and accessible manner, ensuring the journal is a valuable tool for historians, philosophers, practicing scientists, and general readers. To enable it to have the broadest coverage possible, Endeavour features four types of articles: -Research articles are concise, fully referenced, and beautifully illustrated with high quality reproductions of the most important source material. -In Vivo articles will illustrate the rich and numerous connections between historical and philosophical scholarship and matters of current public interest, and provide rich, readable explanations of important current events from historical and philosophical perspectives. -Book Reviews and Commentaries provide a picture of the rapidly growing history of science discipline. Written by both established and emerging scholars, our reviews provide a vibrant overview of the latest publications and media in the history and philosophy of science. -Lost and Found Pieces are playful and creative short essays which focus on objects, theories, tools, and methods that have been significant to science but underappreciated by collective memory.
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