Overview
- Provides a multi-spatial and historical approach to the issue of environment, health and disease
- Enlarges the analysis beyond the traditional disciplinary borders
- Highlights the variety of sources that give us an insight on the perception, understandings and theories of the relationship between health, disease and environment
- Gathers philosophical and historical methodologies, theoretical analysis and case studies in a mutually fertilizing way
Part of the book series: Boston Studies in the Philosophy and History of Science (BSPS, volume 333)
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Table of contents (15 chapters)
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Observations, Definitions, and Theories About Environment, Disease, and the Body: How to Embrace the Whole World
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Observations, Definitions, and Theories About Environment, Disease, and the Body: Questioning the Meaning of the Environment
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Healthy or Unhealthy Environments: Sensorial Experiences of Lands, Spaces, and Milieus
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Healthy or Unhealthy Environments: Techniques, Tools, and Concepts to Reconsider the Relationship Between the Environment, Disease and Health
Keywords
- A Global Approach of Environment, Disease and Health
- Care for nature and for oneself
- Deficiency and living space
- Emplaced body
- Environment, health, and disease
- Environmental psychology
- Epidemiology
- Multi-spatial approach of Environment, disease, and health
- Nature in Urban Space:
- landscape/regional and urban planning
About this book
This book has been defined around three important issues: the first sheds light on how people, in various philosophical, religious, and political contexts, understand the natural environment, and how the relationship between the environment and the body is perceived; the second focuses on the perceptions that a particular natural environment is good or bad for human health and examines the reasons behind such characterizations ; the third examines the promotion, in history, of specific practices to take advantage of the health benefits, or avoid the harm, caused by certain environments and also efforts made to change environments supposed to be harmful to human health. The feeling and/or the observation that the natural environment can have effects on human health have been, and are still commonly shared throughout the world. This led us to raise the issue of the links observed and believed to exist between human beings and the natural environment in a broad chronological and geographical framework. In this investigation, we bring the reader from ancient and late imperial China to the medieval Arab world up to medieval, modern, and contemporary Europe. This book does not examine these relationships through the prism of the knowledge of our modern contemporary European experience, which, still too often, leads to the feeling of totally different worlds. Rather, it questions protagonists who, in different times and in different places, have reflected, on their own terms, on the links between environment and health and tries to obtain a better understanding of why these links took the form they did in these precise contexts. This book targets an academic readership as well as an “informed audience”, for whom present issues of environment and health can be nourished by the reflections of the past.
Editors and Affiliations
About the editors
Florence Bretelle-Establet is a senior researcher in history of science at SPHERE (UMR 7219, CNRS & Université Paris Diderot). Since her PhD (1999), devoted to the history of the social, political, and medical interactions between French military physicians sent, at the end of the nineteenth century, to the south of the Qing empire and the local population, she works on the history of medicine in late imperial southern China. She has published articles and book chapters on the social and cultural identities of the actors involved in medicine in late imperial China, on the circulation of medical knowledge all over the empire, or on the different medical writing genres that coexisted in this framework. She has edited several books, and for ten years, she has been one of the chief editors of the journal Extrême-Orient Extrême Occident.
Bibliographic Information
Book Title: Making Sense of Health, Disease, and the Environment in Cross-Cultural History: The Arabic-Islamic World, China, Europe, and North America
Editors: Florence Bretelle-Establet, Marie Gaille, Mehrnaz Katouzian-Safadi
Series Title: Boston Studies in the Philosophy and History of Science
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-19082-8
Publisher: Springer Cham
eBook Packages: History, History (R0)
Copyright Information: Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2019
Hardcover ISBN: 978-3-030-19081-1Published: 02 January 2020
Softcover ISBN: 978-3-030-19084-2Published: 26 August 2021
eBook ISBN: 978-3-030-19082-8Published: 01 January 2020
Series ISSN: 0068-0346
Series E-ISSN: 2214-7942
Edition Number: 1
Number of Pages: XXI, 378
Number of Illustrations: 11 b/w illustrations
Topics: History of Science, World History, Global and Transnational History, Philosophy of Science, History of Medicine, Landscape/Regional and Urban Planning