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The Logic of Location: Malaria Research in Colonial India, Darjeeling and Duars, 1900–30

This article explores the scientific and entrepreneurial incentives for malaria research in the tea plantations of north Bengal in colonial India. In the process it highlights how the logic of ‘location’ emerged as the central trope through which medical experts, as well as colonial administrators a...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: BHATTACHARYA, NANDINI
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Medical History 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3066663/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21461309
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author BHATTACHARYA, NANDINI
author_facet BHATTACHARYA, NANDINI
author_sort BHATTACHARYA, NANDINI
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description This article explores the scientific and entrepreneurial incentives for malaria research in the tea plantations of north Bengal in colonial India. In the process it highlights how the logic of ‘location’ emerged as the central trope through which medical experts, as well as colonial administrators and planters, defined malaria research in the region. The paper argues that the ‘local’ emerged as both a prerequisite of colonial governance as well as a significant component of malaria research in the field. Despite the ambiguities that such a project entailed, tropical medicine was enriched from a diverse understanding of local ecology, habitation, and structural modes of production. Nevertheless, the locality itself did not benefit from anti-malarial policy undertaken either by medical experts or the colonial state. This article suggests that there was a disjuncture between ‘tropical medicine’ and its ‘field’ that could not be accommodated within the colonial plantation system.
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spelling pubmed-30666632011-04-01 The Logic of Location: Malaria Research in Colonial India, Darjeeling and Duars, 1900–30 BHATTACHARYA, NANDINI Med Hist Articles This article explores the scientific and entrepreneurial incentives for malaria research in the tea plantations of north Bengal in colonial India. In the process it highlights how the logic of ‘location’ emerged as the central trope through which medical experts, as well as colonial administrators and planters, defined malaria research in the region. The paper argues that the ‘local’ emerged as both a prerequisite of colonial governance as well as a significant component of malaria research in the field. Despite the ambiguities that such a project entailed, tropical medicine was enriched from a diverse understanding of local ecology, habitation, and structural modes of production. Nevertheless, the locality itself did not benefit from anti-malarial policy undertaken either by medical experts or the colonial state. This article suggests that there was a disjuncture between ‘tropical medicine’ and its ‘field’ that could not be accommodated within the colonial plantation system. Medical History 2011-04 /pmc/articles/PMC3066663/ /pubmed/21461309 Text en Copyright © Nandini Bhattacharya, 2011.
spellingShingle Articles
BHATTACHARYA, NANDINI
The Logic of Location: Malaria Research in Colonial India, Darjeeling and Duars, 1900–30
title The Logic of Location: Malaria Research in Colonial India, Darjeeling and Duars, 1900–30
title_full The Logic of Location: Malaria Research in Colonial India, Darjeeling and Duars, 1900–30
title_fullStr The Logic of Location: Malaria Research in Colonial India, Darjeeling and Duars, 1900–30
title_full_unstemmed The Logic of Location: Malaria Research in Colonial India, Darjeeling and Duars, 1900–30
title_short The Logic of Location: Malaria Research in Colonial India, Darjeeling and Duars, 1900–30
title_sort logic of location: malaria research in colonial india, darjeeling and duars, 1900–30
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3066663/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21461309
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