1st Edition
Health and Medicine in the circum-Caribbean, 1800–1968
List of Figures
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter One: "…For the benefit of the planters and the benefit of Mankind…", The Struggle to Control Midwives and Obstetrics on St. Croix, Danish West Indies, 1800-1848
By Niklas Thode Jenson
Chapter Two: ""Any elderly, sensible, prudent woman": The Practice and Practitioners of Midwifery during Slavery in the British Caribbean
By Tara A. Inniss
Chapter Three: From the Plantation to the Academy: Slavery and the Production of Cuban Medicine in the Nineteenth Century
By Steven Palmer
Chapter Four: Race and the Authorization of Biomedicine in Yucatán, Mexico
By David Sowell
Chapter Five: A Benign Place of Healing?: The Contagious Diseases Hospital and Medical Discipline in Post Slavery Barbados
By Denise Challenger
Chapter Six: Tolerating Sex: Prostitution, Gender, and Governance in the Dominican Republic, 1880s-1924
By April J. Mayes
Chapter Seven: The Politics of Professionalization: Puerto Rican Physicians during the Transition from Spanish to U.S. Colonialism
By Nicole Trujillo-Pagán
Chapter Eight: "Improving the Standard of Motherhood": Infant Mortality and the "Mothercraft" Movement in British Guiana
By Juanita De Barros
Chapter Nine: Health in the French Antilles: The Impact of the First World War
By Jacques Dumont
Chapter Ten: The Difficulty of Unhooking the Hookworm: The Rockefeller Foundation, Grace Schneiders-Howard, and Public Health Care in Suriname in the Early Twentieth Century
By Rosemarijn Hoefte
Chapter Eleven: Public Health and Women in Trinidad and Tobago, 1939-1962
By Debbie McCollin
Chapter Twelve: "Red Marly Soil": A Public Health History of Bauxite Mining, Disease, and Medicalization in Jamaica, 1938 to 1968
By David McBride
Contributors
References
Index
Biography
Juanita De Barros is an associate professor in the Department of History at McMaster University. Her research concentrates on urban history and the history of public health and health workers in the British Caribbean. She written and co-edited several books and numerous articles on Caribbean history. Most recently, she co-edited (along with Audra Diptee and David Trotman) a collection of essays on recent Caribbean historiography (Beyond Fragmentation: Perspectives on Caribbean History, 2006).
Steven Palmer is Canada Research Chair in History of International Health at the University of Windsor. He has published a number of books and articles on the history of nationalism, education, social policy, medicine and public health in Costa Rica. His book, Launching Global Health: The Caribbean Odyssey of the Rockefeller Foundation, will be published in 2009. He is currently completing research on the politics of Cuban medicine in the age of bacteriology and US empire.
David Wright is the Hannah Chair in the History of Medicine at McMaster University in Hamilton, Canada. He is the author and co-editor of six books and two dozen articles on the history of mental health and psychiatry, including, most recently (with John Weaver, eds.), Histories of Self-Destruction: Suicide in the Modern Western World (2008).






