Literature DB >> 27040025

Hong Kong Junk: Plague and the Economy of Chinese Things.

Robert Peckham.   

Abstract

Histories of the Third Plague Pandemic, which diffused globally from China in the 1890s, have tended to focus on colonial efforts to regulate the movement of infected populations, on the state's draconian public health measures, and on the development of novel bacteriological theories of disease causation. In contrast, this article focuses on the plague epidemic in Hong Kong and examines colonial preoccupations with Chinese "things" as sources of likely contagion. In the 1890s, laboratory science invested plague with a new identity as an object to be collected, cultivated, and depicted in journals. At the same time, in the increasingly vociferous anti-opium discourse, opium was conceived as a contagious Chinese commodity: a plague. The article argues that rethinking responses to the plague through the history of material culture can further our understanding of the political consequences of disease's entanglement with economic and racial categories, while demonstrating the extent to which colonial agents "thought through things."

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Year:  2016        PMID: 27040025     DOI: 10.1353/bhm.2016.0011

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


  1 in total

1.  A 'Suitable Soil': Plague's Urban Breeding Grounds at the Dawn of the Third Pandemic.

Authors:  Christos Lynteris
Journal:  Med Hist       Date:  2017-07       Impact factor: 1.419

  1 in total

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