Article ID: CBB075639297

Global Risks, Divergent Pandemics: Contrasting Responses to Bubonic Plague and Smallpox in 1901 Cape Town (2018)

unapi

This article explores two simultaneous epidemics that, despite similar pathologies, prompted significantly varying responses from public health actors in 1901 Cape Town: the bubonic plague and smallpox. The Cape Colony responded to the plague with racialized quarantining, forcibly removing all black Africans from certain poor neighborhoods and transferring them to a camp on the outskirts of the city. It was the most significant segregationist act in Cape Town's history to date and foreshadowed the actions of governments in postunification and apartheid South Africa. Conversely, smallpox, though highly contagious and deadly, did not prompt similar aggression. Drawing from archival material, I argue that this differential treatment was the result of a global medical concern for the spread of plague to Europe that imposed external demands upon any region affected by plague that were nonexistent for smallpox. These demands aligned with local ideologies that equated state control with racial discipline to produce the first urban township in South Africa. This article addresses the global processes at work within seemingly localized epidemics and contributes to existing scholarship by exploring the role of medical experts and scientific knowledge in the framing of early pandemic threats.

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Authors & Contributors
Phillips, Howard
Elisa Tinelli
Ruiz Vega, Paloma
Pouget, Benoît
Tumbe, Chinmay
Wehrman, Andrew
Journals
Centaurus: International Magazine of the History of Mathematics, Science, and Technology
Atti e Memorie, Rivista di Storia della Farmacia
Social History of Medicine
Medizinhistorisches Journal
Isis: International Review Devoted to the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences
Historical Studies in the Natural Sciences
Publishers
Johns Hopkins University Press
Edizioni Dedalo
Van Riebeeck Society
University of California, Davis
Penguin
Palgrave Macmillan
Concepts
Public health
Pandemics
Plague
Medicine and government
Disease and diseases
Smallpox
People
Trump, Donald H.
Fauci, Anthony S.
Time Periods
20th century, early
19th century
20th century
18th century
Medieval
Republic of Venice (697–1797)
Places
United States
South Africa
Europe
Italy
India
San Francisco (California)
Institutions
World Health Organization (WHO)
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