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This book is open access under a CC BY 4.0 license. This book
breaks new ground by situating animals and their diseases at the
very heart of modern medicine. In demonstrating their historical
significance as subjects and shapers of medicine, it offers
important insights into past animal lives, and reveals that what we
think of as 'human' medicine was in fact deeply zoological. Each
chapter analyses an important episode in which animals changed and
were changed by medicine. Ranging across the animal inhabitants of
Britain's zoos, sick sheep on Scottish farms, unproductive
livestock in developing countries, and the tapeworms of California
and Beirut, they illuminate the multi-species dimensions of modern
medicine and its rich historical connections with biology, zoology,
agriculture and veterinary medicine. The modern movement for One
Health - whose history is also analyzed - is therefore revealed as
just the latest attempt to improve health by working across species
and disciplines. This book will appeal to historians of animals,
science and medicine, to those involved in the promotion and
practice of One Health today.
Ninety years after the discovery of human influenza virus, Modern
Flu traces the history of this breakthrough and its
implications for understanding and controlling influenza ever
since. Examining how influenza came to be defined as a viral
disease in the first half of the twentieth century, it argues that
influenza’s viral identity did not suddenly appear with the
discovery of the first human influenza virus in 1933. Instead, it
was rooted in the development of medical virus research and
virological ways of knowing that grew out of a half-century of
changes and innovations in medical science that were shaped through
two influenza pandemics, two world wars, and by state-sponsored
programs to scientifically modernise British medicine. A series of
transformations, in which virological ideas and practices were
aligned with and incorporated into medicine and public health,
underpinned the viralisation of influenza in the 1930s and 1940s.
Collaboration, conflict and exchange between researchers, medical
professionals and governmental bodies lay at the heart of this
process. This book is a history of how virus researchers,
clinicians, and epidemiologists, medical scientific and public
health bodies, and institutions, and philanthropies in Britain, the
USA and beyond, forged a new medical consensus on the identity and
nature of influenza. Shedding new light on the modern history of
influenza, this book is a timely account of how ways of knowing and
controlling this intractable epidemic disease became viral.
This book is open access under a CC BY 4.0 license. This book
breaks new ground by situating animals and their diseases at the
very heart of modern medicine. In demonstrating their historical
significance as subjects and shapers of medicine, it offers
important insights into past animal lives, and reveals that what we
think of as 'human' medicine was in fact deeply zoological. Each
chapter analyses an important episode in which animals changed and
were changed by medicine. Ranging across the animal inhabitants of
Britain's zoos, sick sheep on Scottish farms, unproductive
livestock in developing countries, and the tapeworms of California
and Beirut, they illuminate the multi-species dimensions of modern
medicine and its rich historical connections with biology, zoology,
agriculture and veterinary medicine. The modern movement for One
Health - whose history is also analyzed - is therefore revealed as
just the latest attempt to improve health by working across species
and disciplines. This book will appeal to historians of animals,
science and medicine, to those involved in the promotion and
practice of One Health today.
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