Imperial Pharmakon
Writing and Medicine in the Long Nineteenth Century
Palgrave Macmillan UK
ISBN 978-3-031-90876-7
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Bibliografische Daten
Fachbuch
Buch. Hardcover
2025
6 s/w-Abbildungen, 6 Farbabbildungen.
In englischer Sprache
Umfang: xiv, 444 S.
Format (B x L): 14,8 x 21 cm
Verlag: Palgrave Macmillan UK
ISBN: 978-3-031-90876-7
Weiterführende bibliografische Daten
Das Werk ist Teil der Reihe: Palgrave Studies in Literature, Science and Medicine
Produktbeschreibung
This examination of medicine’s reversible moods is anchored in British India, a colony that had the longest exposure to imperial rule and administration. India offers a unique set of historical materials that permits Shetty’s long and wide view of her subject. While a transimperial lens articulates colonial and metropolitan medical history, making the networked relationality of medicine newly visible and meaningful, the book’s longue durée approach illumines broad shifts that develop and disclose themselves over time. The singularity of the British Indian case also prompts this study’s reimagination of geographies, actors, and issues deemed relevant in established scholarship on colonial medicine and studies of literature and medicine. Imperial Pharmakon de-provincializes the latter and deepens the former by rendering the colonial medical past in a different key.
Insisting on the analytic salience of literary and post/colonial forms of knowing, this book also brings a fresh ecological perspective to its reading. Moving across individual and collective scales and human/nonhuman divides, Shetty offers granular readings of historical events and figures, simultaneously keeping an eye on perimedical figures (the animal), unacknowledged connections (America), and structuring concepts (friend/enemy) that take us beyond colonial medicine proper, yet reveal themselves to be elements of its ecological unconscious, its thanatopolitical grammar, or its primordial capacity for hospitality.
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Focuses on British India, the non-Western colony with the most sustained exposure to material and epistemic change Emphasizes colonial medicine's mutability and heterogeneity, focusing on a range of specialities and diseases Engages in making comparative connections between colonial and metropolitan histories of medicine
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