Wu Yu-Chuan
J Hist Med Allied Sci. 2016 Jul;71(3):322-44. doi: 10.1093/jhmas/jrv029. Epub 2015 Sep 11.
Neurasthenia became a common disease and caused widespread concern in Japan at the turn of the twentieth century, whereas only a couple of decades earlier the term "nerve" had been unfamiliar, if not unknown, to many Japanese. By exploring the theories and practices of breathing exercise-one of the most popular treatments for neurasthenia at the time-this paper attempts to understand how people who practiced breathing exercises for their nervous ills perceived, conceived, and accordingly cared for their nerves. It argues that they understood "nerve" based on their existing conceptions of qi Neurasthenia was for them a disorder of qi, although the qi had assumed modern appearances as blood and nervous current. The paper hopes to contribute to the understanding of how the concept of nerves has been accepted and assimilated in East Asia. It also points out the need to understand the varied cultures of nerves not only at the level of concept and metaphor, but also at the level of perception and experience.
神经衰弱在20世纪之交成为日本的一种常见疾病并引起广泛关注,而仅仅几十年前,“神经”这个词对许多日本人来说即便不是完全陌生,也是很不熟悉的。通过探究呼吸练习的理论与实践(当时治疗神经衰弱最流行的疗法之一),本文试图理解那些因神经疾病而进行呼吸练习的人如何感知、构想并相应地呵护他们的神经。本文认为,他们基于现有的气的概念来理解“神经”。对他们而言,神经衰弱是一种气的紊乱,尽管气已呈现出现代的表象,如血液和神经电流。本文希望有助于理解神经概念在东亚是如何被接受和同化的。它还指出,不仅需要在概念和隐喻层面,而且需要在感知和体验层面理解神经的多元文化。