Literature DB >> 24932060

Gnawing Pains, Festering Ulcers, and Nightmare Suffering: Selling Leprosy as a Humanitarian Cause in the British Empire, c. 1890-1960.

Kathleen Vongsathorn.   

Abstract

When British attention was drawn to the issue of leprosy in the Empire, humanitarian organisations rose to take on responsibility for the 'fight against leprosy'. In an effort to fundraise for a distant cause at a time when hundreds of charities competed for the financial support of British citizens, fundraisers developed propaganda to set leprosy apart from all other humanitarian causes. They drew on leprosy's relationship with Christianity, its debilitating symptoms, and the supposed vulnerability of leprosy sufferers in order to mobilise Britain's sense of humanitarian, Christian, and patriotic duty. This article traces the emergence of leprosy as a popular imperial humanitarian cause in modern Britain and analyses the narratives of religion, suffering, and disease that they created and employed in order to fuel their growth and sell leprosy as a British humanitarian cause.

Entities:  

Year:  2012        PMID: 24932060      PMCID: PMC4055987          DOI: 10.1080/03086534.2012.730839

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Imp Commonw Hist        ISSN: 0308-6534


  2 in total

1.  Healing bodies, saving souls. Medical missions in Asia and Africa.

Authors:  David Hardiman
Journal:  Clio Med       Date:  2006

2.  Godly medicine: the ambiguities of medical mission in southeast Tanzania, 1900-1945.

Authors:  T O Ranger
Journal:  Soc Sci Med B       Date:  1981-07
  2 in total

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