Article ID: CBB394438457

Immunity, Capital, and Power in Antebellum New Orleans (2019)

unapi

Antebellum New Orleans sat at the heart of America’s slave and cotton kingdoms. But it was also the nation’s “necropolis,” with yellow fever routinely killing about 8 percent of its population. With little epidemiological understanding of mosquito-borne viruses—and meager public health infrastructure—a person’s only protection against the scourge was to “get acclimated”: fall sick with, and survive, yellow fever. About half of all people died in the acclimating process. Repeated epidemics generated a hierarchy of immunocapital whereby “acclimated citizens” (survivors) leveraged their immunity for social, economic, and political power and “unacclimated strangers” (poor recent immigrants) languished in social and professional purgatory. For whites, acclimation was the quintessential demonstration of calculated risk-taking: that people had paid their biological dues, were worthy of investment, and could now justifiably pursue economic advancement in slave racial capitalism. For black slaves, who were embodied capital, immunity enhanced the value and safety of that capital for their white owners, strengthening the set of racialized assumptions about the black body bolstering racial slavery. By fusing health with capitalism, this article presents a new model—beyond the toxic fusion of white supremacy with the flows of global capitalism—for how power operated in nineteenth-century Atlantic society.

...More
Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB394438457/

Similar Citations

Book Kathryn Olivarius; (2022)
Necropolis: Disease, Power, and Capitalism in the Cotton Kingdom (/isis/citation/CBB181588231/)

Book Urmi Engineer Willoughby; (2017)
Yellow Fever, Race, and Ecology in Nineteenth-Century New Orleans (/isis/citation/CBB065443274/)

Article Kim, S.; (2014)
Control Discourses and Power Relations of Yellow Fever: Philadelphia in 1793 (/isis/citation/CBB001422429/)

Thesis Paul Michael Warden; (2019)
Yellow Fever in the Imagination and Development of an American New Orleans, 1793-1860 (/isis/citation/CBB006071963/)

Article McKiven, Henry M., Jr.; (2007)
The Political Construction of a Natural Disaster: The Yellow Fever Epidemic of 1853 (/isis/citation/CBB000850695/)

Article Kenny, Stephen C.; (2010)
“A Dictate of Both Interest and Mercy”? Slave Hospitals in the Antebellum South (/isis/citation/CBB000932690/)

Book Humphreys, Margaret; (2008)
Intensely Human: The Health of the Black Soldier in the American Civil War (/isis/citation/CBB000774696/)

Article Alcalá Ferráez, Carlos; (2012)
De miasmas a mosquitos: el pensamiento médico sobre la fiebre amarilla en Yucatán, 1890--1920 (/isis/citation/CBB001420572/)

Book Wendy Gonaver; (2019)
The Peculiar Institution and the Making of Modern Psychiatry, 1840–1880 (/isis/citation/CBB313122849/)

Article Huffard, R. Scott, Jr.; (2013)
Infected Rails: Yellow Fever and Southern Railroads (/isis/citation/CBB001200324/)

Article Farias, Rosilene Gomes; (2012)
Pai Manoel, o curandeiro africano, e a medicina no Pernambuco imperial (/isis/citation/CBB001420628/)

Book Dickerson, James L.; (2006)
Yellow Fever: A Deadly Disease Poised to Kill Again (/isis/citation/CBB000800195/)

Book Espinosa, Mariola; (2009)
Epidemic Invasions: Yellow Fever and the Limits of Cuban Independence, 1878--1930 (/isis/citation/CBB001020061/)

Book de Barros, Juanita; Palmer, Steven Paul; Wright, David; (2009)
Health and Medicine in the Circum-Caribbean, 1800--1968 (/isis/citation/CBB001230954/)

Article Henrique, Márcio Couto; (2012)
Escravos no purgatório: o leprosário do Tucunduba (Pará, século XIX) (/isis/citation/CBB001420625/)

Authors & Contributors
Espinosa, Mariola
Marcia Chatelain
Kathryn Olivarius
Warden, Paul Michael
McQueeney, Kevin
Willoughby, Urmi Engineer
Journals
História, Ciências, Saúde---Manguinhos
Korean Journal of Medical History
Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences
Journal of Southern History
Journal of American History
Bulletin of the History of Medicine
Publishers
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
University of California, Santa Barbara
Georgetown University
University of North Carolina Press
University of Chicago Press
Routledge
Concepts
Public health
Yellow fever
Epidemics
Medicine and race
Slavery
Disease and diseases
People
Jean Charles Faget
Deléry, Charles François
Rush, Benjamin
Finlay, Carlos Juan
Time Periods
19th century
18th century
20th century
21st century
20th century, early
Places
United States
New Orleans (Louisiana, U.S.)
Brazil
Southern states (U.S.)
Cuba
Philadelphia, PA
Institutions
United States. Public Health Service
Comments

Be the first to comment!

{{ comment.created_by.username }} on {{ comment.created_on | date:'medium' }}

Log in or register to comment