来自黎凡特的创新:天花接种和对科学医学的认识。

IF 0.7 1区 哲学 Q2 HISTORY & PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE
Victoria N Meyer
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引用次数: 0

摘要

工业化国家的现代公共卫生活动围绕着预防传染病的免疫接种展开。十八世纪,西欧社会和医学界首次出现了通过疾病产生免疫力来预防疾病的做法,即接种,其基础是舶来品中东的 "接种 "做法。到十九世纪,这种做法演变成了疫苗接种程序,最初是针对天花的。因此,大众和学术界往往将接种归类为一种来自中东的程序,而英国和法国的知识将其转变为真正科学的疫苗接种程序。这种描述掩盖了十八和十九世纪英法网络与中东社会之间复杂的知识交流传统。本文对这些网络进行了研究,以说明在这一时期,知识是如何随着社区之间的流通而发生变化的。不同社会阶层的西欧人和埃及人都根据其知识和目标的需要翻译了外国或新的医疗实践,形成了采用和适应的循环。对接种和疫苗接种的探索加深了我们对全球知识流通中根深蒂固的双边翻译过程的理解。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Innovations from the Levant: smallpox inoculation and perceptions of scientific medicine.

Modern public-health initiatives in industrialized countries revolve around immunization against contagious diseases. The practice of engendering immunity against disease through disease first emerged in Western European social and medical landscapes in the eighteenth century as inoculation, based on the imported Middle Eastern practice of 'engrafting'. By the nineteenth century, this practice had evolved into the procedure of vaccination, in the first instance directed against smallpox. Popular and academic narratives thus often categorize inoculation as a procedure from the Middle East which was transformed into the truly scientific procedure of vaccination by English and French knowledge. This characterization has obscured the complex traditions of intellectual exchange between English and French networks and Middle Eastern societies in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. This article examines these networks in order to show how knowledge was transformed as it circulated between communities during this period. Both Western Europeans and Egyptians across different social hierarchies translated foreign or new medical practices according to the needs of their knowledge and goals, creating cycles of adoption and adaptation. This exploration of inoculation and vaccination furthers our understanding of the bilateral translation processes ingrained in the global circulation of knowledge.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.80
自引率
12.50%
发文量
59
期刊介绍: This leading international journal publishes scholarly papers and review articles on all aspects of the history of science. History of science is interpreted widely to include medicine, technology and social studies of science. BJHS papers make important and lively contributions to scholarship and the journal has been an essential library resource for more than thirty years. It is also used extensively by historians and scholars in related fields. A substantial book review section is a central feature. There are four issues a year, comprising an annual volume of over 600 pages. Published for the British Society for the History of Science
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