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Books > History > World history
The collapse of the Soviet Union and the Soviet bloc had a profound
effect on Turkey economically and politically. On the one hand, the
collapse further marginalized Turkey's position in Western Europe,
as some of the newly liberated Central and Eastern European
countries raced ahead of Turkey to join the European Union. On the
other hand, the collapse presented Turkey with new opportunities
and challenges stemming from geographic proximity and
cultural/historical ties with countries that emerged from the
Soviet bloc and from the former Soviet Union. In articles focusing
on the 1990s and beyond, this book explores how the economic and
political fortunes of Turkey have changed since the end of the Cold
War. Two main sections of the book examine Turkey's relations with
the European Union and with the former Soviet Union and Soviet bloc
countries. Each section opens with a chapter providing an overview
of Turkey's political relationship with the respective region,
followed by chapters that examine facets of the politico-economic
relationships. Located in a potentially volatile portion of the
world, Turkey plays an important role in maintaining peace and
prosperity in its region. The analysis in this volume allows an
understanding of the critical factors that influence the political
economy of Turkey, and therefore, its ability to contribute to
world peace and stability.
In October 1946, Colonel Presley Rixey arrived by destroyer at
Chichi Jima to repatriate 22,000 Japanese who had been bypassed
during the war in the Pacific. While waiting for a Marine battalion
to arrive, the colonel met daily with a Japanese commission
assigned to assist him. When asked what had happened to American
prisoners on the island, the Japanese hatched a story to hide the
atrocities that they had committed. In truth, the downed flyers had
been captured, executed, and eaten by certain senior Japanese
officers. This is the story of the investigation, the cover-up, and
the last hours of those Americans who disappeared into war's
wilderness and whose remains were distributed to the cooking
galleys of Chichi Jima. Rixey's suspicion of a cover-up was later
substantiated by a group of Americans returning from Japan who had
lived on Chichi Jima for generations. It would take five months of
gathering testimony to uncover all the details. Thirty war
criminals were eventually tried at Guam in 1947, five of whom met
their fate on the gallows.
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 Euopeans
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. Pratik Chakrabarti is Chair in
History of Science and Medicine, University of Manchester.
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