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This is a cultural history of borders, hygiene and race. It is about foreign bodies, from Victorian Vaccines to the pathologized interwar immigrant, from smallpox quarantine to the leper colony, from sexual hygiene to national hygiene to imperial hygiene. Taking British colonialism and White Australia as case studies, the book examines public health as spatialized biopolitical governance between 1850 and 1950. Colonial management of race dovetailed with public health into new boundaries of rule, into racialized cordons sanitaires.
The author examines practitioners of medicine, as well as patients,
as embodied and sexed subjects in this book. She brings together
cultural and feminist theories on the body, 19th-century medical
history and the history of gender and Victorian feminism. The book
seeks to investigate the ways in which many different practitioners
- male and female doctors, nurses, midwives, accoucheurs - were
implicated in a discourse and a material practice about the pure
and the polluted.
"Medicine at the Border" explores the pressing issues of border
control and infectious disease in the nineteenth, twentieth and
twenty-first centuries. The book places world health in world
history, microbes and their management in globalization, and
disease in the history of international relations, bringing
together leading scholars on the history and politics of global
health. The authors show how infectious disease has been central to
the political, legal and commercial history of nationalism,
colonialism and internationalism over the modern period.
This is a cultural history of borders, hygiene and race. It is
about foreign bodies, from Victorian Vaccines to the pathologized
interwar immigrant, from smallpox quarantine to the leper colony,
from sexual hygiene to national hygiene to imperial hygiene. Taking
British colonialism and White Australia as case studies, the book
examines public health as spatialized biopolitical governance
between 1850 and 1950. Colonial management of race dovetailed with
public health into new boundaries of rule, into racialised cordons
sanitaires .
This book explores the pressing issues of border control and
infectious disease from the nineteenth to present day. The book
places world health in world history, microbes and their management
in globalization, and disease in the history of international
relations, bringing together leading scholars on the history and
politics of global health.
This is a cultural history of borders, hygiene and race. It is
about foreign bodies, from Victorian Vaccines to the pathologized
interwar immigrant, from smallpox quarantine to the leper colony,
from sexual hygiene to national hygiene to imperial hygiene. Taking
British colonialism and White Australia as case studies, the book
examines public health as spatialized biopolitical governance
between 1850 and 1950. Colonial management of race dovetailed with
public health into new boundaries of rule, into racialised cordons
sanitaires .
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