Military Medicine and the Making of Race

Military Medicine and the Making of Race
Author: Tim Lockley
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 223
Release: 2020-04-02
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 1108495621

Demonstrates how Britain's black soldiers helped shape the very idea of race in the nineteenth century Atlantic world.

Warm Climates and Western Medicine

Warm Climates and Western Medicine
Author:
Publisher: BRILL
Total Pages: 256
Release: 2020-01-29
Genre: Medical
ISBN: 900441844X

It is generally assumed that tropical medicine only emerged as a medical specialism in the late nineteenth century under the aegis of men like Patrick Manson and Ronald Ross. However, recent research (much of it brought together for the first time in this volume) shows that a distinctive medicine of 'warm climates' came into existence much earlier in areas like the West-Indies, Indonesia and India. Europeans' health needs were one imperative, but this was more than just the medicine of Europe shipped overseas. Contact with non-Western medical ideas and practices was also a stimulus, as was Europe's encounter with unfamiliar environments and peoples. These essays provide valuable insights into the early history of tropical medicine and from the standpoint of several European powers. They examine the kinds of medicine practised, the responses to local diseases and environments and diseases, the nature of the medical constituencies that developed, and the relationship between the old medicine of 'warm climates' and the emerging tropical medicine of the late nineteenth century. The volume as a whole expands the parameters for the discussion of the evolution of Western medicine and opens up new perspectives on European science and society overseas.

Difference and Disease

Difference and Disease
Author: Suman Seth
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 341
Release: 2018-06-07
Genre: Medical
ISBN: 1108304850

Before the nineteenth century, travellers who left Britain for the Americas, West Africa, India and elsewhere encountered a medical conundrum: why did they fall ill when they arrived, and why - if they recovered - did they never become so ill again? The widely accepted answer was that the newcomers needed to become 'seasoned to the climate'. Suman Seth explores forms of eighteenth-century medical knowledge, including conceptions of seasoning, showing how geographical location was essential to this knowledge and helped to define relationships between Britain and her far-flung colonies. In this period, debates raged between medical practitioners over whether diseases changed in different climes. Different diseases were deemed characteristic of different races and genders, and medical practitioners were thus deeply involved in contestations over race and the legitimacy of the abolitionist cause. In this innovative and engaging history, Seth offers dramatically new ways to understand the mutual shaping of medicine, race, and empire.

The Caribbean Slave

The Caribbean Slave
Author: Kenneth F. Kiple
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 296
Release: 2002-06-20
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780521524704

A comprehensive analysis of the biological experience of black slaves in the Caribbean.