« Nous sommes en guerre » ?

Faced with the Covid-19 pandemic, many Heads of States have resorted to military metaphors, while the journalists and historians who were invited to recall the major epidemics of the past have regularly conjured up Thucydides’ account of “the Great Plague” of Athens in 429 B.C., during the Peloponne...

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Main Author: Reine-Marie Bérard
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Presses universitaires du Midi 2022-01-01
Series:Histoire, Médecine et Santé
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/hms/4980
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author Reine-Marie Bérard
author_facet Reine-Marie Bérard
author_sort Reine-Marie Bérard
collection DOAJ
description Faced with the Covid-19 pandemic, many Heads of States have resorted to military metaphors, while the journalists and historians who were invited to recall the major epidemics of the past have regularly conjured up Thucydides’ account of “the Great Plague” of Athens in 429 B.C., during the Peloponnesian War. This paper’s aim is to trace the origins of the military metaphor as it applies to disease control, and to compare the perceptions of epidemic and military death tolls in Ancient Greece, using historical and archeological sources. It appears that the Greek perceptions of epidemic v.s. military death tolls were poles apart: whereas epidemic deaths were deemed to be meaningless, military deaths contributed to rebuilding social cohesion in the endangered city. It may be in this quest for meaning, revolving around the union of a community, that the major stake of representing an epidemic as the Enemy is to be found, especially in our modern societies which can no longer perceive war as a tangible reality of everyday life.
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spelling doaj.art-545cac33fa06434b875fb88f8b7a71cc2023-02-09T16:10:41ZengPresses universitaires du MidiHistoire, Médecine et Santé2263-89112557-21132022-01-011914517010.4000/hms.4980« Nous sommes en guerre » ?Reine-Marie BérardFaced with the Covid-19 pandemic, many Heads of States have resorted to military metaphors, while the journalists and historians who were invited to recall the major epidemics of the past have regularly conjured up Thucydides’ account of “the Great Plague” of Athens in 429 B.C., during the Peloponnesian War. This paper’s aim is to trace the origins of the military metaphor as it applies to disease control, and to compare the perceptions of epidemic and military death tolls in Ancient Greece, using historical and archeological sources. It appears that the Greek perceptions of epidemic v.s. military death tolls were poles apart: whereas epidemic deaths were deemed to be meaningless, military deaths contributed to rebuilding social cohesion in the endangered city. It may be in this quest for meaning, revolving around the union of a community, that the major stake of representing an epidemic as the Enemy is to be found, especially in our modern societies which can no longer perceive war as a tangible reality of everyday life.http://journals.openedition.org/hms/4980Ancient Greecedeath tollswarepidemicpost-mortem treatment
spellingShingle Reine-Marie Bérard
« Nous sommes en guerre » ?
Histoire, Médecine et Santé
Ancient Greece
death tolls
war
epidemic
post-mortem treatment
title « Nous sommes en guerre » ?
title_full « Nous sommes en guerre » ?
title_fullStr « Nous sommes en guerre » ?
title_full_unstemmed « Nous sommes en guerre » ?
title_short « Nous sommes en guerre » ?
title_sort nous sommes en guerre
topic Ancient Greece
death tolls
war
epidemic
post-mortem treatment
url http://journals.openedition.org/hms/4980
work_keys_str_mv AT reinemarieberard noussommesenguerre