Article ID: CBB145766431

Health, Hearth and Empire: Climate, Race and Reproduction in British India and Western Australia (2021)

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In the wake of the Indian Uprising in 1857, British sanitary campaigner and statistician Florence Nightingale renewed her efforts to reform Britain's military forces at home and in India. With the Uprising following so soon after the Crimean War (1854-56), where poor sanitary conditions had also taken an enormous toll, in 1859 Nightingale pressed the British Parliament to establish a Royal Commission on the Sanitary State of the Army in India, which delivered its report in 1863. Western Australia was the only colony to present its case before the Commissioners as an ideal location for a foreign sanatorium, with glowing assessments offered by colonial elites and military physicians. In the meantime, Nightingale had also commenced an investigation into the health of Indigenous children across the British Empire. Nearly 150 schools responded to her survey from Ceylon, Natal, West Africa, Canada and Australia. The latter's returns came from just three schools in Western Australia: New Norcia, Annesfield in Albany and the Sisters of Mercy in Perth, which together yielded the highest death rate of the respondents. Although Nightingale herself saw these inquiries as separate, their juxtaposition invites closer analysis of the ways in which metropolitan elites envisioned particular racial futures for Anglo and indigenous populations of empire, and sought to steer them accordingly. The reports reflect prevailing expectations and anxieties about the social and biological reproduction of white society in the colonies, and the concomitant decline of Indigenous peoples. Read together, these two inquiries reveal the complex ways in which colonial matters of reproduction and dispossession, displacement and replacement, were mutually constituting concerns of empire. In this article I situate the efforts to attract white women and their wombs to the temperate colony of Western Australia from British India in the context of contemporary concerns about Anglo and Aboriginal mortality. In doing so, I reflect on the intersections of gender, race, medicine and environment in the imaginaries of empire in the mid-nineteenth century.

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Article Katie Holmes; Ruth Morgan (2021) Placing Gender: Gender and Environmental History. Environment and History (pp. 187-191). unapi

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Authors & Contributors
Arnold, David J.
Chakrabarti, Pratik
Ashraf Wani, Mohd
Bhat, Rouf Ahmad
Doyle, Aunty Kerrie
Sale, Kayla
Journals
Social History of Medicine
Canadian Journal of Health History/Revue canadienne d’histoire de la santé
Indian Journal of History of Science
History of Psychiatry
Historical Research: The Bulletin of the Institute of Historical Research
Health and History
Publishers
University of Rochester Press
Univ. Chicago Press
Palgrave Macmillan
Oxford University Press
Liverpool University Press
Lexington Books
Concepts
Great Britain, colonies
Colonialism
Medicine and race
Medicine and society
Tropical medicine
Medicine
People
Nightingale, Florence
Time Periods
19th century
20th century, early
18th century
20th century
17th century
Enlightenment
Places
India
Australia
South Africa
Canada
Brazil
Tropics
Institutions
East India Company (English)
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