パスツールの帝国:フランスの細菌学と植民地支配<br>Pasteur's Empire : Bacteriology and Politics in France, Its Colonies, and the World

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パスツールの帝国:フランスの細菌学と植民地支配
Pasteur's Empire : Bacteriology and Politics in France, Its Colonies, and the World

  • 著者名:Velmet, Aro
  • 価格 ¥12,926 (本体¥11,751)
  • Oxford University Press(2019/12/31発売)
  • ポイント 117pt (実際に付与されるポイントはご注文内容確認画面でご確認下さい)
  • 言語:ENG
  • ISBN:9780190072827
  • eISBN:9780190072841

ファイル: /

Description

In the 1890s, the Pasteur Institute established a network of laboratories that stretched across France's empire, from Indochina to West Africa. Quickly, researchers at these laboratories became central to France's colonial project, helping officials monopolize industries, develop public health codes, establish disease containment measures, and arbitrate political conflicts around questions of labor rights, public works, and free association.Pasteur's Empire shows how the scientific prestige of the Pasteur Institute came to depend on its colonial laboratories, and how, conversely, the institutes themselves became central to colonial politics. This book argues that decisions as small as the isolation of a particular yeast or the choice of a laboratory animal could have tremendous consequences on the lives of Vietnamese and African subjects, who became the consumers of new vaccines or industrially fermented intoxicants. Simultaneously, global forces, such as the rise of international standards and American competitors pushed Pastorians to their imperial laboratories, where they could conduct studies that researchers in France considered too difficult or controversial. Chapters follow not just Alexandre Yersin's studies of the plague, Charles Nicolle's public health work in Tunisia, and Jean Laigret's work on yellow fever in Dakar, but also the activities of Vietnamese doctors, African students and politicians, Syrian traders, and Chinese warlords. It argues that a specifically Pastorian understanding of microbiology shaped French colonial politics across the world, allowing French officials to promise hygienic modernity while actually committing to little development. In bringing together global history, imperial history, and science and technology studies, Pasteur's Empire deftly integrates micro and macro analyses into one connected narrative that sheds critical light on a key era in the history of medicine.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations and MapsAcknowledgmentsIntroduction: Technology and Scale in Colonial Politics1. The Invention of Pastorization2. Pastorization and Its Discontents3. Monks and Warriors, Bureaucrats and Businessmen4. The Making of Imperial Tuberculosis5. BCG and Technopolitics from Europe to Empire6. The Racial Politics of Microbes in Colonial Dakar7. Africa in the Global Race for a Yellow Fever VaccineConclusion: Pastorian Origins of Global HealthNotesBibliographyIndex

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