不同的人,不同的醉:近代早期英国医学对不同醉文化的认识。

IF 0.4 Q3 HISTORY & PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE
Canadian Bulletin of Medical History Pub Date : 2021-01-01 Epub Date: 2021-08-17 DOI:10.3138/cbmh.488-112020
Edoardo Pierini
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在近代早期的欧洲,全球范围的毒品交易和新物质的引入促进了醉人新文化的发展。这一过程在英国尤为明显,人们认识到不同的物质会产生相似的反应,从而产生了一种新的中毒文化。医疗旅行文献为研究这一时期非西方世界的其他药物消费方式提供了重要来源:土耳其人吃鸦片或美洲原住民吸烟等文化根深蒂固的做法成为与西方饮酒习惯进行比较的重要基准。这篇文章认为,早期现代西方医学界依靠在其他情况下醉酒的比较,努力描述自己的文化嵌入的酒精中毒的做法。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Different Peoples, Different Inebriations: The Recognition of Different Cultures of Intoxication in Early Modern English Medicine.

In early modern Europe, the global dimensions of the drug trade and the introduction of new substances contributed to the development of new cultures of intoxication. This process was particularly evident in England, where a new intoxication culture emerged from the recognition of how different substances produced similar reactions. Medical travel literature provides a critical source for examining alternative methods of drug consumption in the non-Western world in this period: culturally embedded practices like Turkish opium eating or Native American tobacco smoking became significant benchmarks for comparing with Western habits of alcohol consumption. This article argues that the early modern Western medical community relied on comparisons of intoxication in other contexts in an effort to describe its own culturally embedded practices of alcohol intoxication.

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来源期刊
Canadian Bulletin of Medical History
Canadian Bulletin of Medical History HISTORY & PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE-
自引率
0.00%
发文量
36
期刊介绍: The Canadian Bulletin of Medical History / Bulletin canadien d"histoire de la médecine is the official organ of the Canadian Society for the History of Medicine/ Société canadienne d"histoire de la médecine and is the primary outlet in Canada for refereed scholarship in the history of medicine. This journal, published twice yearly, presents articles, notes, review articles, and book reviews in French and in English. No aspect of the general field is excluded as a matter of policy, though the particular focus is on scholarship in Canadian medical history.
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