Tropical Colonization
Author : Alleyne Ireland
Publisher :
Page : 328 pages
File Size : 36,28 MB
Release : 1899
Category : Colonies
ISBN :
Author : Alleyne Ireland
Publisher :
Page : 328 pages
File Size : 36,28 MB
Release : 1899
Category : Colonies
ISBN :
Author : Warwick Anderson
Publisher : Duke University Press
Page : 367 pages
File Size : 13,81 MB
Release : 2006-08-21
Category : Medical
ISBN : 0822388081
Colonial Pathologies is a groundbreaking history of the role of science and medicine in the American colonization of the Philippines from 1898 through the 1930s. Warwick Anderson describes how American colonizers sought to maintain their own health and stamina in a foreign environment while exerting control over and “civilizing” a population of seven million people spread out over seven thousand islands. In the process, he traces a significant transformation in the thinking of colonial doctors and scientists about what was most threatening to the health of white colonists. During the late nineteenth century, they understood the tropical environment as the greatest danger, and they sought to help their fellow colonizers to acclimate. Later, as their attention shifted to the role of microbial pathogens, colonial scientists came to view the Filipino people as a contaminated race, and they launched public health initiatives to reform Filipinos’ personal hygiene practices and social conduct. A vivid sense of a colonial culture characterized by an anxious and assertive white masculinity emerges from Anderson’s description of American efforts to treat and discipline allegedly errant Filipinos. His narrative encompasses a colonial obsession with native excrement, a leper colony intended to transform those considered most unclean and least socialized, and the hookworm and malaria programs implemented by the Rockefeller Foundation in the 1920s and 1930s. Throughout, Anderson is attentive to the circulation of intertwined ideas about race, science, and medicine. He points to colonial public health in the Philippines as a key influence on the subsequent development of military medicine and industrial hygiene, U.S. urban health services, and racialized development regimes in other parts of the world.
Author : Deborah Neill
Publisher : Stanford University Press
Page : 310 pages
File Size : 27,55 MB
Release : 2012-02-29
Category : History
ISBN : 0804781052
Networks in Tropical Medicine explores how European doctors and scientists worked together across borders to establish the new field of tropical medicine in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The book shows that this transnational collaboration in a context of European colonialism, scientific discovery, and internationalism shaped the character of the new medical specialty. Even in an era of intense competition among European states, practitioners of tropical medicine created a transnational scientific community through which they influenced each other and the health care that was introduced to the tropical world. One of the most important developments in the shaping of tropical medicine as a specialty was the major sleeping sickness epidemic that spread across sub-Saharan Africa at the turn of the century. The book describes how scientists and doctors collaborated across borders to control, contain, and find a treatment for the disease. It demonstrates that these medical specialists' shared notions of "Europeanness," rooted in common beliefs about scientific, technological, and racial superiority, led them to establish a colonial medical practice in Africa that sometimes oppressed the same people it was created to help.
Author : Nandini Bhattacharya
Publisher : Liverpool University Press
Page : 231 pages
File Size : 35,42 MB
Release : 2012-01-01
Category : History
ISBN : 1846318297
Contagion and Enclaves examines the social history of medicine across two intersecting British enclaves in the major tea-producing region of colonial India: the hill station of Darjeeling and the adjacent tea plantations of North Bengal. Focusing on the establishment of hill sanatoria and other health care facilities and practices against the backdrop of the expansion of tea cultivation and labor migration, it tracks the demographic and environmental transformation of the region and the critical role race and medicine played in it, showing that the British enclaves were essential and distinctive sites of the articulation of colonial power and economy.
Author : Ikuko Asaka
Publisher : Duke University Press
Page : 292 pages
File Size : 10,23 MB
Release : 2017-10-19
Category : Social Science
ISBN : 0822372754
In Tropical Freedom Ikuko Asaka engages in a hemispheric examination of the intersection of emancipation and settler colonialism in North America. Asaka shows how from the late eighteenth century through Reconstruction, emancipation efforts in the United States and present-day Canada were accompanied by attempts to relocate freed blacks to tropical regions, as black bodies were deemed to be more physiologically compatible with tropical climates. This logic conceived of freedom as a racially segregated condition based upon geography and climate. Regardless of whether freed people became tenant farmers in Sierra Leone or plantation laborers throughout the Caribbean, their relocation would provide whites with a monopoly over the benefits of settling indigenous land in temperate zones throughout North America. At the same time, black activists and intellectuals contested these geographic-based controls by developing alternative discourses on race and the environment. By tracing these negotiations of the transnational racialization of freedom, Asaka demonstrates the importance of considering settler colonialism and black freedom together while complicating the prevailing frames through which the intertwined histories of British and U.S. emancipation and colonialism have been understood.
Author : Richard H. Grove
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Page : 560 pages
File Size : 11,54 MB
Release : 1996-03-29
Category : Business & Economics
ISBN : 9780521565134
The first book to document the origins and early history of environmentalism, especially its colonial and global aspects.
Author : Peter Sjøholt
Publisher :
Page : 216 pages
File Size : 45,46 MB
Release : 1988
Category : Agricultural colonies
ISBN :
Author : Michael Nelson
Publisher : Routledge
Page : 334 pages
File Size : 10,8 MB
Release : 2013-11-26
Category : Business & Economics
ISBN : 1135993653
First Published in 2011. Latin America today is similar to Canada in the early 1900s-a sleeping giant, basically underpopulated, whose potential rests on the exploitation of enormous land, forest, mineral, and water reserves. This study, carried out over the period 1967-69, has involved travel throughout much of Latin America north of the Tropic of Capricorn and discussions with people in many different fields, including highway construction, forestry, colonization, and agricultural industries in the forest frontier regions and capital cities of the continent. The collection of data required about twelve months of the author in the field.
Author : Albert Galloway Keller
Publisher :
Page : 668 pages
File Size : 45,4 MB
Release : 1908
Category : Colonization
ISBN :
Author : R. L. Green
Publisher :
Page : 0 pages
File Size : 48,91 MB
Release : 2018
Category :
ISBN : 9781498566582
Tropical Idolatry examines how thinkers within the Society of Jesus attempted to convert indigenous peoples of New Spain, the Philippine Islands, and the Mariana Islands to Catholicism. This book demonstrates the importance that both religious and political beliefs played in the establishment of the Church in the Spanish Pacific world.