1st Edition

Rural Disease Knowledge Anthropological and Historical Perspectives

262 Pages 13 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

262 Pages 13 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

262 Pages 13 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

Rural Disease Knowledge  examines the ways in which knowledge of rural spaces and environments, on the one hand, and infectious diseases, on the other, have become inter-constituted since the late nineteenth century. With contributions by leading anthropologists and historians of medicine, it examines the epistemic co-constitution of the rural and of infectious diseases. Ranging from... Read more

1. Introduction: The Scales, Subjects, and Politics of Rural Disease Knowledge

Matheus Alves Duarte da Silva and Christos Lynteris

2. Demarcating the “Field” of Field Epidemiology in Britain: Rurality and the Narration of Epidemics (1850-1950)

Jacob Steere-Williams

3. Extracting Blood, Flies, and Ideas: David and Mary Bruce, Vernacular Experts, and Unakane in Rural Zululand c. 1880s-1900s

Jules Skotnes-Brown

4. Yaws: Medicine and Propaganda in Rural Java, 1911-1942

Maurits Bastiaan Meerwijk

5. Salvador Mazza and Chagas Disease in Argentina: The Epistemic and Political Reshaping of a Controversial Rural Disease, 1926-1946

Juan Pablo Zabala

6. The Epidemiological and Epistemic Emergence of “Rural Plague” in Argentina

Christos Lynteris

7. A Virus in the Forest: Yellow Fever, West Africa, and the Remaking of Alliances Among Living Things, 1900–1950 

Gregg Mitman

8. A Global Desert: Plague, Rural Knowledge, and Epidemiological Reasoning in the Brazilian Backlands (1939–1965) 

Matheus Alves Duarte da Silva

9. Unnecessary Adversaries Amidst War: Biomedical and Non-biomedical Approaches to Leishmaniasis in Rural Colombia

Lina Pinto-Garcia

10. Local Knowledge, Cattle-Human Relations, and Disease Perceptions of the Agropastoralists in the Kilombero Valley, Tanzania

Caroline Mwihaki Mburu and Kathrin Heitz-Tokpa

Index

Biography

Matheus Alves Duarte da Silva is a postdoctoral research fellow at the University of St Andrews in the United Kingdom. His research focuses on the global history of microbiology, tropical medicine, and disease ecology.

Christos Lynteris is Professor of Medical Anthropology at the University of St Andrews in the United Kingdom.  His research focuses on the anthropological and historical study of zoonotic diseases, epizootics, and epidemics.