Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences - RSS feed of articles
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The Figure of the Staggering Rat: Reading Colonial Outbreak Narratives Against the Grain of “Virus Hunting”

AbstractThe image of dazed, plague-infected rats coming out of their nests and performing a pirouette in front of the surprised eyes of humans before dying is one well-known to us through Albert Camus’s The Plague (1947). This article examines the historical roots of this image and its emergence in French missionary narratives about plague outbreaks...

Fri May 3, 2024 17:04
Pandemic Forms

AbstractNarrative structures, though invisible to the naked eye, guide our understanding of pandemics. Like curves and graphs, we can plot them, identify their patterns and organizing principles. These structures act upon our understanding of social and biological events just as much as the rhythms of viral replication and mutation. They order not only...

Fri May 3, 2024 17:04
The End of the Beginning? Temporality and Bioagency in Pandemic Research

AbstractThis paper deals with the ways in which the intellectual and political history of AIDS can assist in the chronological conceptualization of a pandemic such as COVID-19 as it is unfolding. It problematizes the idea of pandemic “beginnings” and “ends” to show that such definitions are shaped by the disciplinary location and thematic foci of relevant...

Fri May 3, 2024 17:04
Advocacy Coalitions, Policy Entrepreneurs, and Windows of Opportunity: Tobacco Control in South Africa, 1948-2018

AbstractThis article examines the political history of tobacco control policy in South Africa from 1948 to 2018 by drawing on available historical documents, media reports, published books and articles, the grey literature, and face-to-face interviews with key policy actors. Tracing the historical evolution of tobacco control policies in South Africa...

Sat Apr 13, 2024 19:01
Mr. Gilbert’s World Tour: Rethinking Disabled Veterans Across British Imperial Spaces

AbstractThis article provides a comparative analysis of the treatment of disabled First World War veterans in 1920s Britain and the simultaneous care of Imperial Pensioners residing in Australia and South Africa via the detailed administrative reports of a British civil servant, G.F. Gilbert. Imperial Pensioners were disabled veteran migrants of the...

Thu Mar 21, 2024 21:37
The Religious Dimensions of Epidemic Disease: Cholera, the Ghost Rite, and Missionary Medicine in Nineteenth-Century Korea

AbstractOne of the most catastrophic pandemics in human history was the repeated spread of cholera in the nineteenth century. In spite of its historical significance, few scholars have studied cholera’s influence in East Asia. This paper illustrates how cholera was considered, conceptualized, and treated by Korean people prior to contact with North...

Wed Feb 7, 2024 20:08

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