Chakrabarti, Pratik (Author)
During the nineteenth century, European scientists and physicians considered the tropics the natural home of pathogens. Hot and miasmic, the tropical world was the locus of disease, for Europeans the great enemy of civilization. In the late nineteenth century when bacteriological laboratories and institutions were introduced to British India, they were therefore as much an imperial mission to cleanse and civilize a tropical colony as a medical one to eradicate disease. Bacteriology offered a panacea in colonial India, a way by which the multifarious political, social, environmental, and medical problems and anxieties, intrinsically linked to its diseases, could have a single resolution. Bacteriology in British India is the first book to provide a social and cultural history of bacteriology in colonial India, situating it within the confluence of advances in germ theory, Pastuerian vaccines, colonial medicine, laboratory science, and British imperialism. It recounts the genesis of bacteriology and laboratory medicine in India through a complex history of conflict and alignment between Pasteurism and British imperial medicine. By investigating an array of laboratory notes, medical literature, and literary sources, the volume links colonial medical research with issues of poverty, race, nationalism, and imperial attitudes toward tropical climate and wildlife, contributing to a wide field of scholarship like the history of science and medicine, sociology of science, and cultural history.
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Book
Chakrabarti, Pratik;
(2012)
Bacteriology in British India: Laboratory Medicine and the Tropics
Article
Amir Teicher;
(2020)
Medical Bacteriology and Medical Genetics, 1880–1940: A Call for Synthesis
Article
Minsky, Lauren;
(2009)
Pursuing Protection from Disease: The Making of Smallpox Prophylactic Practice in Colonial Punjab
Book
Hugh Cagle;
(2018)
Assembling the Tropics: Science and Medicine in Portugal's Empire, 1450-1700
Article
Ruth A. Morgan;
(2021)
Health, Hearth and Empire: Climate, Race and Reproduction in British India and Western Australia
Article
Indranil Sanyal;
(2022)
Dr. Gopaul Chunder Roy (1844–1887): An extraordinary life dedicated to the cause of medical science
Book
Bhattacharya, Nandini;
(2012)
Contagion and Enclaves: Tropical Medicine in Colonial India
Article
Arup K. Chatterjee;
(2022)
Aconite in Victorian Tropical Toxicology
Article
Hawgood, Barbara J.;
(2007)
Waldemar Mordecai Haffkine, CIE (1860--1930): Prophylactic Vaccination against Cholera and Bubonic Plague in British India
Article
Chakrabarti, Pratik;
(2010)
Beasts of Burden: Animals and Laboratory Research in Colonial India
Article
Chakrabarti, Pratik;
(2010)
“Living versus Dead”: The Pasteurian Paradigm and Imperial Vaccine Research
Article
Kyu-hwan Sihn;
(2017)
Reorganizing Hospital Space: The 1894 Plague Epidemic in Hong Kong and the Germ Theory
Article
Flavio D'Abramo;
Sybille Neumeyer;
(2020)
A Historical and Political Epistemology of Microbes
Article
Richardson, Ruth;
(2013)
Inflammation, Suppuration, Putrefaction, Fermentation: Joseph Lister's Microbiology
Article
García, Mónica;
(2014)
Typhoid Fever in Nineteenth-Century Colombia: Between Medical Geography and Bacteriology
Book
Bala, Poonam;
(2009)
Biomedicine as a Contested Site: Some Revelations in Imperial Contexts
Article
Arnold, David J.;
(2012)
The Medicalization of Poverty in Colonial India
Book
Yip, Ka-che;
(2009)
Disease, Colonialism, and the State: Malaria in Modern East Asian History
Article
Mishra, Saurabh;
(2011)
Beasts, Murrains, and the British Raj: Reassessing Colonial Medicine in India from the Veterinary Perspective, 1860--1900
Chapter
Gilbert, Pamela K.;
(2003)
Mapping Colonial Disease: Victorian Medical Cartography in British India
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