Literature DB >> 15179951

The nurse of parasites: gender concepts in Patrick Manson's parasitological research.

Shang-Jen Li1.   

Abstract

Patrick Manson (1844-1922), the so-called father of tropical medicine, played a pivotal role in making that discipline into a specialty. During his early career in China he discovered that the mosquito was the intermediate host of the filarial parasite and he somewhat peculiarly called the mosquito the "nurse" of the filarial worm. The discovery contributed greatly to the intellectual foundation of modern parasitology. In this paper I situate Manson's nomenclature in the context of nineteenth-century biological research on reproductive mech-anisms and argue that Manson's concept of the "nurse" was derived from nineteenth-century theories of sexual division of labor in nature's economy. The way he framed the relation between the mosquito and the parasite, moreover, can be understood in the terms of the domestic arrangement of the colonial European household. Manson's research demonstrates the significant exchange between medical concerns over European women's procreative role in the tropics and biological studies of parasitic reproduction.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15179951     DOI: 10.1023/b:hist.0000020280.93881.48

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Hist Biol        ISSN: 0022-5010            Impact factor:   1.326


  10 in total

1.  Natural history of parasitic disease. Patrick Manson's philosophical method.

Authors:  Shang-Jen Li
Journal:  Isis       Date:  2002-06       Impact factor: 0.688

2.  Framing tropical disease in London: Patrick Manson, Filaria perstans, and the Uganda sleeping sickness epidemic, 1891-1902.

Authors:  D M Haynes
Journal:  Soc Hist Med       Date:  2000-12       Impact factor: 0.973

3.  "Enemies of the race": biologism, environmentalism, and public health in Edwardian England.

Authors:  D Porter
Journal:  Vic Stud       Date:  1991

4.  The "moral anatomy" of Robert Knox: the interplay between biological and social thought in Victorian scientific naturalism.

Authors:  E Richards
Journal:  J Hist Biol       Date:  1989       Impact factor: 1.326

5.  Sex and the single organism: biological theories of sexuality in mid-nineteenth century.

Authors:  F B Churchill
Journal:  Stud Hist Biol       Date:  1979

6.  Principles of general physiology: the comparative dimension to British neuroscience in the 1830s and 1840s.

Authors:  L S Jacyna
Journal:  Stud Hist Biol       Date:  1984

7.  Ferriar's fever to Kay's cholera: disease and social structure in cottonopolis.

Authors:  J V Pickstone
Journal:  Hist Sci       Date:  1984-12       Impact factor: 0.892

8.  Imperialism and motherhood.

Authors:  A Davin
Journal:  Hist Workshop       Date:  1978

9.  The beast in the mosquito: the correspondence of Ronald Ross and Patrick Manson.

Authors: 
Journal:  Clio Med       Date:  1998

10.  A political anatomy of monsters, hopeful and otherwise. Teratogeny, transcendentalism, and evolutionary theorizing.

Authors:  E Richards
Journal:  Isis       Date:  1994-09       Impact factor: 0.688

  10 in total
  1 in total

1.  Individuals at the center of biology: Rudolf Leuckart's Polymorphismus der Individuen and the ongoing narrative of parts and wholes. With an annotated translation.

Authors:  Lynn K Nyhart; Scott Lidgard
Journal:  J Hist Biol       Date:  2011       Impact factor: 1.326

  1 in total

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