Buxton Hilary
*Institute for Historical Research,School of Advanced Study,University of London,Senate House,Malet Street,London WC1E 7HU,UK. Email:
Br J Hist Sci. 2018 Sep;51(3):457-485. doi: 10.1017/S0007087418000493.
In 1878, amid a rapidly proliferating social interest in public health and cleanliness, a group of sanitary scientists and reformers founded the Parkes Museum of Hygiene in central London. Dirt and contagion knew no social boundaries, and the Parkes's founders conceived of the museum as a dynamic space for all classes to better themselves and their environments. They promoted sanitary science through a variety of initiatives: exhibits of scientific, medical and architectural paraphernalia; product endorsements; and lectures and certificated courses in practical sanitation, food inspection and tropical hygiene. While the Parkes's programmes reified the era's hierarchies of class and gender, it also pursued a public-health mission that cut across these divisions. Set apart from the great cultural and scientific popular museums that dominated Victorian London, it exhibited a collection with little intrinsic value, and offered an education in hygiene designed to be imported into visitors' homes and into urban spaces in the metropole and beyond. This essay explores the unique contributions of the Parkes Museum to late nineteenth-century sanitary science and to museum development, even as the growth of public-health policy rendered the museum obsolete.
1878年,在社会对公共卫生和清洁的兴趣迅速增长之际,一群卫生科学家和改革者在伦敦市中心创立了帕克斯卫生博物馆。污垢和传染病不分社会界限,帕克斯博物馆的创始人将该博物馆设想为一个让各阶层人士改善自身及环境的充满活力的空间。他们通过各种举措推广卫生科学:展示科学、医学和建筑用具;进行产品推荐;举办关于实用卫生、食品检验和热带卫生的讲座及认证课程。虽然帕克斯博物馆的项目强化了那个时代的阶级和性别等级制度,但它也践行了一项跨越这些划分的公共卫生使命。与主导维多利亚时代伦敦的大型文化和科学普及博物馆不同,它展出的藏品本身价值不大,提供的卫生教育旨在引入参观者的家中以及大都市及其他地区的城市空间。本文探讨了帕克斯博物馆对19世纪后期卫生科学和博物馆发展的独特贡献,尽管公共卫生政策的发展使该博物馆过时了。