Literature DB >> 18791295

From foetid air to filth: the cultural transformation of British epidemiological thought, ca. 1780-1848.

Michael Brown1.   

Abstract

Eighteenth-and early nineteenth-century ideas about the occurrence and spread of epidemic disease were complex and contested. Although many thought that diseases such as plague, typhus, and cholera were contagious and were communicated from person to person or via the medium of goods, others believed that they were the product of atmospheric change. Moreover, as historians have emphasized, the early nineteenth century saw a move from a multifactoral, climatic etiology toward one that prioritized specific local corruption of the atmosphere caused by putrefying animal and vegetable matter. In this paper, I extend this analysis by linking to recent literature on dirt and disgust and exploring the importance of theologies. I examine the work of two key figures in the history of British epidemiology, Charles Maclean and Thomas Southwood Smith, and demonstrate how the latter's increasing emphasis upon the causal agency of filth was structured by his Unitarian faith and his belief in a universally benevolent God.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18791295      PMCID: PMC2646604          DOI: 10.1353/bhm.0.0070

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Bull Hist Med        ISSN: 0007-5140            Impact factor:   1.314


  19 in total

1.  Providence and putrefaction: Victorian sanitarians and the natural theology of health and disease.

Authors:  C Hamlin
Journal:  Vic Stud       Date:  1985

2.  Medical priorities and practice in nineteenth-century British India.

Authors:  D Arnold
Journal:  South Asia Res       Date:  1985

3.  Epidemics and revolutions: cholera in nineteenth-century Europe.

Authors:  R J Evans
Journal:  Past Present       Date:  1988

4.  William Pulteney Alison, the Scottish philosophy, and the making of a political medicine.

Authors:  Christopher Hamlin
Journal:  J Hist Med Allied Sci       Date:  2005-12-23       Impact factor: 2.088

5.  The development of Pasteur's concept of disease causation and the emergence of specific causes in nineteenth-century medicine.

Authors:  K C Carter
Journal:  Bull Hist Med       Date:  1991       Impact factor: 1.314

6.  Anticontagionism between 1821 and 1867.

Authors:  E H ACKERKNECHT
Journal:  Bull Hist Med       Date:  1948-09       Impact factor: 1.314

7.  Southwood Smith: the intellectual sources of public service.

Authors:  R K Webb
Journal:  Clio Med       Date:  1993

8.  "The tender frame of man": disease, climate, and racial difference in India and the West Indies, 1760-1860.

Authors:  M Harrison
Journal:  Bull Hist Med       Date:  1996       Impact factor: 1.314

9.  Edwin Chadwick, "mutton medicine," and the fever question.

Authors:  C Hamlin
Journal:  Bull Hist Med       Date:  1996       Impact factor: 1.314

10.  Finding a function for public health: disease theory or political philosophy?

Authors:  C Hamlin
Journal:  J Health Polit Policy Law       Date:  1995       Impact factor: 2.265

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  2 in total

1.  Mahamari Plague: Rats, Colonial Medicine and Indigenous Knowledge in Kumaon and Garhwal, India.

Authors:  Christos Lynteris
Journal:  Med Anthropol       Date:  2022 May-Jun

2.  History of Medicine: Health, Medicine and Disease in the Eighteenth Century.

Authors:  Jonathan Andrews
Journal:  Br J 18th Cent Stud       Date:  2011-12-01
  2 in total

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