Article ID: CBB725606057

“An Ecological Experiment on the Grand Scale”: Creating an Experimental Field in Bwamba, Uganda, 1942–1950 (2020)

unapi

In the 1940s, the medical entomologist Alexander J. Haddow and his expatriate and indigenous collaborators conducted intensive field studies of the relationships between mosquitos, monkeys, humans, and the yellow fever virus in Bwamba District, Uganda. In order to disentangle the complexities of these relationships, colonial scientists found it necessary to transform natural places into experimental spaces by importing non-native species, manufacturing novel structures, and manipulating the behavior of human residents. This work transformed Bwamba into a particular kind of place, a place constructed to represent nature and natural relationships to the trained and expert eye. In turn, Bwamba shaped the researchers’ increasingly complex understanding of the natural cycles of yellow fever infection. Haddow’s practices reveal the tension between the imperative to understand yellow fever holistically and the imperative to produce experimental results with laboratory-like precision and “placelessness” in mid-twentieth-century medical field research.

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Authors & Contributors
Barnes, David S.
Cabezudo, Diego
Dooren, Thom Van
Garnham, P. C. C.
Kodama, Kaori
Oscarson, Christopher Paul
Journals
Victorian Literature and Culture
Abaco
Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society
Bulletin of the History of Medicine
História, Ciências, Saúde---Manguinhos
History in Africa
Publishers
University of California, Berkeley
Belknap Press of Harvard University Press
Columbia University Press
Duke University Press
Edinburgh University Press
Johns Hopkins University Press
Concepts
Nature and its relationship to culture; human-nature relationships
Ecology
Medicine and society
Yellow fever
Epidemics
Public health
People
Audouard, Maxence
Linnaeus, Carolus
Woolf, Virginia
Haddow, Alexander John
Time Periods
19th century
20th century, early
21st century
18th century
20th century
Places
Uganda
Africa
India
Great Britain
New Orleans (Louisiana, U.S.)
South Africa
Institutions
Rockefeller Foundation
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