想象传染:流行病、监狱和佛朗哥的西班牙空间政治,1936-1945 年

IF 0.4 3区 历史学 Q1 HISTORY
Michael Richards
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引用次数: 0

摘要

最近对西班牙内战后疾病的研究主要集中在对 20 世纪 40 年代早期饥饿问题的研究上。历史学家引用了 1939 年至 1945 年间西班牙发生的斑疹伤寒疫情,以证明大范围的半饥饿与疾病之间存在因果关系。对饥饿的关注虽然重要,但却有可能忽略斑疹伤寒发病和传播过程中的其他重要因素,以及疫情的发展如何揭示了人口迁移在战争及其后果的广泛社会历史中的核心作用。通过密切关注流行病学记录,本文认为斑疹伤寒及其眩晕传播的直接原因主要是意识形态和空间因素。文章首先展示了战争的胜利者是如何利用政治和细菌传染的语言,虚假地声称战时的共和国是造成这一流行病的罪魁祸首。然后,它展示了与共和国有关联的人被大规模集中监禁是如何成为疾病的根源的。疾病的传播依赖于这种大规模的监禁,也依赖于为支持被囚禁者而增加的家庭流动。最后,斑疹伤寒影响了佛朗哥政权的社会想象力及其对卫生、监狱和控制城市贫民流动的焦虑。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Imagining Contagion: Epidemic, Prisons, and Franco Spain's Politics of Space, 1936–1945
Recent accounting for disease in the aftermath of the Spanish Civil War has been contained within study of hunger in the early 1940s. Historians have cited the typhus epidemic which hit Spain between 1939 and 1945 as demonstrating a causal link between widespread semi-starvation and disease. Though important, the focus on hunger risks losing sight of other vital elements in the onset and transmission of typhus, however, as well as the way the epidemic's progress sheds light on population movement as central to the broader social history of the war and its aftermath. By paying close attention to epidemiological records, this article argues that the direct causes of typhus and its vertiginous spread were primarily ideological and spatial. It shows first how the war's victors used the language of political and bacterial contagion to claim spuriously that the wartime Republic was responsible for the epidemic. It then demonstrates how the intense confinement on a huge scale of those linked to the Republic was at the root of the disease. Transmission depended on this mass imprisonment and on the increased circulation of families to support those in captivity. Finally, typhus influenced the social imagination of the Franco regime and its anxiety about hygiene, prisons, and control of the movement of the urban poor.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
37
期刊介绍: European History Quarterly has earned an international reputation as an essential resource on European history, publishing articles by eminent historians on a range of subjects from the later Middle Ages to post-1945. European History Quarterly also features review articles by leading authorities, offering a comprehensive survey of recent literature in a particular field, as well as an extensive book review section, enabling you to keep up to date with what"s being published in your field. The journal also features historiographical essays.
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