Walther, Daniel J. (Author)
In responding to the perceived threat posed by venereal diseases in Germany’s colonies, doctors took a biopolitical approach that employed medical and bourgeois discourses of modernization, health, productivity, and morality. Their goal was to change the behavior of targeted groups, or at least to isolate infected individuals from the healthy population. However, the Africans, Pacific Islanders, and Asians they administered to were not passive recipients of these strategies. Rather, their behavior strongly influenced the efficacy and nature of these public health measures. While an apparent degree of compliance was achieved, over time physicians increasingly relied on disciplinary measures beyond what was possible in Germany in order to enforce their policies. Ultimately, through their discourses and actions they contributed to the justification for and the maintenance of German colonialism.
...MoreReview Erica Wald (2016) Review of "Sex and Control: Venereal Disease, Colonial Physicians, and Indigenous Agency in German Colonialism, 1884-1914". Social History of Medicine (pp. 641-643).
Article
Christian Strother;
(2014)
“A Danger Which More or Less Threatens Us All”: Yellow fever and the politics of disease control in Senegal 1890–1914
Book
Lenny A. Ureña Valerio;
(2019)
Colonial Fantasies, Imperial Realities: Race Science and the Making of Polishness on the Fringes of the German Empire, 1840–1920
Article
Lachenal, Guillaume;
(2013)
Médecine, comparaisons et échanges inter-impériaux dans le mandat camerounais: une histoire croisée franco-allemande de la mission Jamot
Book
Yip, Ka-che;
(2009)
Disease, Colonialism, and the State: Malaria in Modern East Asian History
Book
Kristin Hussey;
(2021)
Imperial Bodies in London: Empire, Mobility, and the Making of British Medicine, 1880–1914
Book
Anna Winterbottom;
Facil Tesfaye;
(2015)
Histories of Medicine and Healing in the Indian Ocean World, Volume One: The Medieval and Early Modern Period
Essay Review
Gallagher, Nancy;
(2012)
Medicine and Modernity in the Middle East and North Africa
Article
William J. Ryan;
(2018)
"A New Strange Disease": The Feeling of Form in Hans Sloane's Case Studies of English Jamaica
Book
Biswamoy Pati;
Mark Harrison;
(2018)
Society, Medicine and Politics in Colonial India
Essay Review
Boomgaard, Peter;
(2011)
Essay Review
Article
Naono, Atsuko;
(2010)
Inoculators, the Indigenous Obstacle to Vaccination in Colonial Burma
Thesis
Burke, Chloe Serene;
(2004)
Germs, Genes, and Dissent: Representing Radicalism as Disease in American Political Cartooning, 1877--1919
Book
Smith, F. B.;
(2011)
Illness in Colonial Australia
Book
Jones, Greta;
Malcolm, Elizabeth;
(1999)
Medicine, disease, and the State in Ireland, 1650-1940
Article
Arner, Katherine;
(2013)
Making Global Commerce into International Health Diplomacy: Consuls and Disease Control in the Age of Revolutions
Article
Bates, Victoria;
(2013)
“So Far as I Can Define without a Microscopical Examination”: Venereal Disease Diagnosis in English Courts, 1850--1914
Book
Abugideiri, Hibba;
(2010)
Gender and the Making of Modern Medicine in Colonial Egypt
Book
Anna Greenwood;
Harshad Topiwala;
(2015)
Indian Doctors in Kenya, 1895-1940: The Forgotten History
Book
Espinosa, Mariola;
(2009)
Epidemic Invasions: Yellow Fever and the Limits of Cuban Independence, 1878--1930
Book
Sarah Ann Pinto;
(2018)
Lunatic Asylums in Colonial Bombay: Shackled Bodies, Unchained Minds
Be the first to comment!