Thesis ID: CBB079759500

Medicine Is War: The Martial Metaphor in Victorian Literature and Culture (2017)

unapi

Medicine is most often understood through the metaphor of war, as in “the fight against Ebola”. What I call the “martial metaphor” is so embedded in the discourses of medicine—and the disciplines that critique it—that we do not think twice about using this construction or about its bioethical implications, much less its origins. As the first cultural history of the martial metaphor, “Medicine Is War: The Martial Metaphor in Victorian Literature and Culture” shows how it gained cultural purchase throughout the nineteenth century to become the figure of speech so prevalent today. The thought of medicine as war didn’t begin as a metaphor; it emerged from the material connections between the military and medicine. These material connections were reflected on and redeployed as a metaphor by such authors as Mary Shelley, Arthur Conan Doyle, Charles Kingsley, Bram Stoker, and Joseph Conrad during the advent of medical modernity to become codified in everyday usage. Part I discusses how Shelley and Kingsley conflated the cholera epidemics of the first half of the nineteenth century with war in the context of pre-bacteriological theories of disease. Part II addresses the connections between empire, race, and germ theory in the second half of the nineteenth century as articulated through the writings of Stoker, Conan Doyle, and Conrad, where we see that the epistemological change to understanding disease as caused by living organisms challenged Britain’s salubrious racial identity. “Medicine Is War” accounts for the historical baggage in the language commonly used to articulate the encounter with disease. Scholars such as Pamela Gilbert and Laura Otis who have referenced the metaphor in the context of other investigations of how nineteenth literature dealt with biological anxieties mapped onto political ones and vice versa have not addressed the cultural work of the metaphor itself. By contrast, “Medicine is War” traces how the metaphor’s history influenced its use in the Victorian era, revealing how literature occluded the military history of medical language and circulated the resulting metaphor in the public imaginary.

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Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB079759500/

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Authors & Contributors
Michael Joseph
Fabio Terence Palmi Zoia
Fitzharris, Lindsey
Neumeyer, Sybille
Marissa Moorman
Bonhomme, Edna
Journals
Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences
Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences
Notes and Records: The Royal Society Journal of the History of Science
Nineteenth-Century Contexts
Isis: International Review Devoted to the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences
Health and History
Publishers
University of Rochester Press
Rodopi
Indiana University Press
Farrar, Straus & Giroux
Cornell University Press
Cambridge University Press
Concepts
Medicine
Imperialism
Race
Germ theory of disease
Colonialism
Medicine and the military; medicine in war
People
Lister, Joseph, Baron
Koch, Robert
Trollope, Anthony
Margulis, Lynn
Darwin, Charles Robert
Callender, George W.
Time Periods
19th century
20th century
18th century
20th century, early
17th century
Places
Great Britain
India
France
Europe
Indonesia
South Africa
Institutions
Dutch East India Company
St. Bartholomew's Hospital (London)
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