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Yale University Press
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Epidemics and History
Language:
English
Published/Copyright:
1997
About this book
This book is a major and wide-ranging study of the great epidemic scourges of humanityplague, leprosy, smallpox, syphilis, cholera, and yellow fever/malariaover the last six centuries. It is also much more. Sheldon Watts, a cultural and social historian who has spent much of his career studying and teaching in the world’s South, applies a wholly original perspective to the study of global disease, exploring the connections between the movement of epidemics and the manifestations of imperial power in the Americas, Asia, Africa, and in European homelands. He shows how the perceptions of whom a disease targeted changed over time and effected various political and medical responses. He argues that not only did Western medicine fail to cure the diseases that its own expansion engendered, but that imperial medicine was in fact an agent and tool of empire.
Watts examines the relationship between the pre-modern and modern medical profession and such epidemic disasters as the plague in western Europe and the Middle East; leprosy in the medieval West and in the nineteenth-century tropical world; the spread of smallpox to the New World in the age of exploration; syphilis and nonsexual diseases in Europe’s connection with Asia; cholera in India during British rule; and malaria in the Atlantic Basin during the eras of slavery and Social Darwinism. He investigates in detail the relation between violent environmental changes and disease, and between disease and society, both in the material sphere and in the minds and spirits of rulers and ruled. This book will become the standard account of the way diseasesarising through chance, through reckless environmental change engineered by man, or through a combination of eachwere interpreted in Western Europe and in the colonized world.
Watts examines the relationship between the pre-modern and modern medical profession and such epidemic disasters as the plague in western Europe and the Middle East; leprosy in the medieval West and in the nineteenth-century tropical world; the spread of smallpox to the New World in the age of exploration; syphilis and nonsexual diseases in Europe’s connection with Asia; cholera in India during British rule; and malaria in the Atlantic Basin during the eras of slavery and Social Darwinism. He investigates in detail the relation between violent environmental changes and disease, and between disease and society, both in the material sphere and in the minds and spirits of rulers and ruled. This book will become the standard account of the way diseasesarising through chance, through reckless environmental change engineered by man, or through a combination of eachwere interpreted in Western Europe and in the colonized world.
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Frontmatter
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Contents
v -
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Illustrations
vii -
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Acknowledgements
ix -
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Introduction
xi -
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1. The Human Response to Plague in Western Europe and the Middle East, 1347 to 1844
1 -
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2. Dark Hidden Meanings: Leprosy and Lepers in the Medieval West and in the Tropical World under the European Imperium
40 -
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3. Smallpox in the New World and in the Old: From Holocaust to Eradication, 1518 to 1977
84 -
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4. The Secret Plague: Syphilis in West Europe and East Asia, 1492, to 1965
122 -
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5. Cholera and Civilization: Great Britain and India, 1817 to 1920
167 -
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6. Yellow Fever, Malaria and Development: Atlantic Africa and the New World, 1647 to 1928
213 -
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7. Afterword: To the Epidemiologic Transition?
269 -
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Notes
280 -
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Select Bibliography
368 -
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Index
385
Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
October 8, 2018
eBook ISBN:
9780300174298
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
Main content:
416
Other:
42 b/w illus.