Medicine in an age of Commerce and Empire: Britain and its Tropical Colonies 1660-1830
January 01, 2011, Pages 1-368
Wellcome Unit for the History of Medicine, University of Oxford, United Kingdom
Abstract
This book examines
the consequences of commercial and imperial expansion for British
medicine between roughly 1660 and 1830. It pays particular attention to
the development of medical ideas and practices in India and the British
West Indies and their impact on medicine at home. The book argues that
the tropical colonies were important sites of innovation and that the
experience gained by practitioners working there transformed medical
practice in ways which have not been fully appreciated. India, the West
Indies, and other overseas outposts offered tremendous scope for those
seeking to understand the nature of disease and to observe its effects
in living patients and post-mortem. Colonial hospitals also afforded
many opportunities for trials of new drugs: not only new botanical
remedies but also chemical therapies, some of which were pioneered in
the colonies. It is argued that these opportunities bolstered a growing
movement for reform in British medicine, with particular emphasis upon
the importance of empiricism, experiment, and morbid anatomy. The book
also ponders the relationship between reform in the medical arena and
the politics of Dissent, as well as the impact of colonialism and
commerce upon the professional environment in Britain. It shows how
former colonial practitioners became increasingly influential in British
medicine, tapping into fears about invasion by alien diseases,
degeneration, and social change. © Mark Harrison 2010. All rights
reserved.
Author keywords
british army; Colonies; Commerce; Dissent; Empiricism; Hospital medicine; India; Reform; Royal Navy; West Indies
ISBN: 978-019159519-6;978-019957773-6
Original language: English
DOI: 10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199577736.001.0001Document Type: Book
Publisher: Oxford University Press