Lawlor Clark
Lit Med. 2017;35(2):355-386. doi: 10.1353/lm.2017.0017.
This essay examines the way in which disease was framed and narrated as fashionable in the long eighteenth century, and argues that the intensifying focus on women's fashionable disorders in the period grew in tandem with the rise of an unstable capitalism in its manifold forms. Using the satirical articles written by Henry Southern in the London Magazine-"On Fashions" (August 1825), "On Fashions in Physic" (October 1825), and "On Dilettante Physic" (January 1826)-and the literature that led to them, I analyze the role that women were now taking in the newly capitalized world of the early nineteenth century. This world was characterized by a burgeoning medical market, a periodical and print market which could adequately reflect and promote fashionable diseases and the medical market that spawned them, and the nexus of actors in the whole drama of the production, maintenance, and dissolution of fashionable diseases.
本文考察了在漫长的18世纪,疾病是如何被建构并被描述为时尚的,并认为这一时期对女性时尚疾病的日益关注与多种形式的不稳定资本主义的兴起同步增长。通过分析亨利·萨瑟恩在《伦敦杂志》上发表的讽刺文章——《论时尚》(1825年8月)、《论医学时尚》(1825年10月)和《论业余医学》(1826年1月)——以及引发这些文章的相关文献,我剖析了19世纪初女性在新兴的资本主义世界中所扮演的角色。这个世界的特点是蓬勃发展的医疗市场、能够充分反映和推广时尚疾病及其催生的医疗市场的期刊和印刷市场,以及时尚疾病产生、维持和解体全过程中的相关参与者网络。