Article ID: CBB396192326

Endemic risks: influenza pandemics, public health, and making self-reliant Indian citizens (2020)

unapi

This article focuses on the politics of epidemics, health and development in the years between two pandemics of influenza in India, the so-called ‘Asian’ flu (1957) and the ‘Hong Kong’ flu (1968). I explore how public health and risk-focused cosmologies were constructed about urban life, and anchored in economic priorities about development planning, industrial productivity, and self-reliance in a modernizing Indian nation. How were pandemics ‘seen’ and identified among urban populations that were already suffering from endemic risks? Were they viewed as a continuum of local, natural hazards or through wider geopolitical insecurities? The influenza crises were characterized by incapacitation and absenteeism from work rather than high mortality rates in Indian cities, causing worries about industrial plans. The Indian state intervened minimally, and articulated ideas and rhetoric about individual responsibility and ‘cooperative citizenship’ that set the stage for later manifestations of neoliberalism.

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Authors & Contributors
Honigsbaum, Mark
Alibrandi, Rosamaria
M. Kemal Temel
John Harriss
Arnold, David J.
Harris, James J.
Journals
Journal of Asian Studies
História, Ciências, Saúde---Manguinhos
Medicina Historica
Canadian Journal of Health History/Revue canadienne d’histoire de la santé
The Journal of African American History
Social History of Medicine
Publishers
University of Cambridge (United Kingdom)
University of California Press
Oxford University Press
I. B. Tauris
HarperCollins Publishers
New York University
Concepts
Pandemics
Public health
Influenza
Medicine and society
Medicine and politics
Infectious diseases
Time Periods
20th century, early
21st century
19th century
20th century, late
20th century
16th century
Places
United States
India
Great Britain
Istanbul (Turkey)
Hong Kong
Bogotá (Colombia)
Institutions
National Health Service (Great Britain)
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