Pain: Metaphor, body, and culture in Anglo-American societies between the eighteenth and twentieth centuries

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Abstract

This article explores the relationship between metaphorical languages, body, and culture, and suggests that such an analysis can reveal a great deal about the meaning and experience of pain in Anglo-American societies between the eighteenth and twentieth centuries. It uses concepts within embodied cognition to speculate on how historians can write a history of sensation. Bodies are actively engaged in the linguistic processes and social interactions that constitute painful sensations. Language is engaged in a dialogue with physiological bodies and social environments. And culture collaborates in the creation of physiological bodies and metaphorical systems. 2014

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Bourke, J. (2014, October 2). Pain: Metaphor, body, and culture in Anglo-American societies between the eighteenth and twentieth centuries. Rethinking History. Routledge. https://doi.org/10.1080/13642529.2014.893660

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