Book Description
Abstract of the two folio volumes of the Report and Appendix of the Royal commission on the sanitary state of the army in India.
Author : Great Britain. Royal Commission on the Sanitary State of the Army in India
Publisher :
Page : 640 pages
File Size : 42,69 MB
Release : 1864
Category : Great Britain
ISBN :
Abstract of the two folio volumes of the Report and Appendix of the Royal commission on the sanitary state of the army in India.
Author : Great Britain. Parliament
Publisher :
Page : 284 pages
File Size : 18,53 MB
Release : 1863
Category : India
ISBN :
Author : Stewart Clark
Publisher :
Page : 184 pages
File Size : 21,32 MB
Release : 1864
Category : Hygiene
ISBN :
Author : James Anthony Froude
Publisher :
Page : 820 pages
File Size : 13,31 MB
Release : 1864
Category : English periodicals
ISBN :
Author :
Publisher :
Page : 808 pages
File Size : 37,59 MB
Release : 1864
Category : Great Britain
ISBN :
Author : Verity McInnis
Publisher : University of Oklahoma Press
Page : 301 pages
File Size : 46,24 MB
Release : 2017-11-09
Category : History
ISBN : 0806159375
In his Rules for Wife Behavior, Colonel Joseph Whistler summed up his expectations for his new bride: “You will remember you are not in command of anything except the cook.” Although their roles were circumscribed, the wives of army officers stationed in British India and the U.S. West commanded considerable influence, as Verity McInnis reveals in this comparative study of two female populations in two global locations. Women of Empire adds a previously unexplored dimension to our understanding of the connections between gender and imperialism in the nineteenth century. McInnis examines the intersections of class, race, and gender to reveal social spaces where female identity and power were both contested and constructed. Officers’ wives often possessed the authority to direct and maintain the social, cultural, and political ambitions of empire. By transferring and adapting white middle-class cultural values and customs to military installations, they created a new social reality—one that restructured traditional boundaries. In both the British and American territorial holdings, McInnis shows, military wives held pivotal roles, creating and controlling the processes that upheld national aims. In so doing, these women feminized formal and informal military practices in ways that strengthened their own status and identities. Despite the differences between rigid British social practices and their less formal American counterparts, military women in India and the U.S. West followed similar trajectories as they designed and maintained their imperial identity. Redefining the officer’s wife as a power holder and an active contributor to national prestige, Women of Empire opens a new, nuanced perspective on the colonial experience—and on the complex nexus of gender, race, and imperial practice.
Author : Philip D. Curtin
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Page : 276 pages
File Size : 49,26 MB
Release : 1989-11-24
Category : History
ISBN : 9780521389228
This book is a quantitative study of relocation costs among European soldiers in the tropics from 1815 to 1914.
Author : David Arnold
Publisher : Univ of California Press
Page : 370 pages
File Size : 27,17 MB
Release : 1993-08-12
Category : History
ISBN : 9780520082953
In this innovative analysis of medicine and disease in colonial India, David Arnold explores the vital role of the state in medical and public health activities, arguing that Western medicine became a critical battleground between the colonized and the colonizers. Focusing on three major epidemic diseases—smallpox, cholera, and plague—Arnold analyzes the impact of medical interventionism. He demonstrates that Western medicine as practiced in India was not simply transferred from West to East, but was also fashioned in response to local needs and Indian conditions. By emphasizing this colonial dimension of medicine, Arnold highlights the centrality of the body to political authority in British India and shows how medicine both influenced and articulated the intrinsic contradictions of colonial rule.
Author : Sheila Zurbrigg
Publisher : Taylor & Francis
Page : 294 pages
File Size : 16,31 MB
Release : 2019-08-28
Category : History
ISBN : 1000691454
This book highlights the role of acute hunger in malaria lethality in colonial South Asia and investigates how this understanding came to be lost in modern medical, epidemic, and historiographic thought. Using the case studies of colonial Punjab, Sri Lanka, and Bengal, it traces the loss of fundamental concepts and language of hunger in the inter-war period with the reductive application of the new specialisms of nutritional science and immunology, and a parallel loss of the distinction between infection (transmission) and morbid disease. The study locates the final demise of the ‘Human Factor’ (hunger) in malaria history within pre- and early post-WW2 international health institutions – the International Health Division of the Rockefeller Foundation and the nascent WHO’s Expert Committee on Malaria. It examines the implications of this epistemic shift for interpreting South Asian health history, and reclaims a broader understanding of common endemic infection (endemiology) as a prime driver, in the context of subsistence precarity, of epidemic mortality history and demographic change. This book will be useful to scholars and researchers of public health, social medicine and social epidemiology, imperial history, epidemic and demographic history, history of medicine, medical sociology, and sociology.
Author : Timothy Mitchell
Publisher : U of Minnesota Press
Page : 259 pages
File Size : 26,47 MB
Release :
Category : Social Science
ISBN : 1452904170