• Order to parcel locker

    Order to parcel locker
  • easy pay

    easy pay
  • Reduced price
Contagious Communities

Contagious Communities

Medicine, Migration, and the NHS in Post War Britain

9780198725282
435.24 zł
391.72 zł Save 43.52 zł Tax included
Lowest price within 30 days before promotion: 391.72 zł
Quantity
Available in 4-6 weeks

  Delivery policy

Choose Paczkomat Inpost, Orlen Paczka, DPD or Poczta Polska. Click for more details

  Security policy

Pay with a quick bank transfer, payment card or cash on delivery. Click for more details

  Return policy

If you are a consumer, you can return the goods within 14 days. Click for more details

Description
It was only a coincidence that the NHS and the Empire Windrush (a ship carrying 492 migrants from Britains West Indian colonies) arrived together. On 22 June 1948, as the ships passengers disembarked, frantic preparations were already underway for 5 July, the Appointed Day when the nations new National Health Service would first open its doors. The relationship between immigration and the NHS rapidly attained - and has enduringly retained - notable political and culturalsignificance.Both the Appointed Day and the post-war arrival of colonial and Commonwealth immigrants heralded transformative change. Together, they reshaped daily life in Britain and notions of Britishness alike. Yet the reciprocal impacts of post-war immigration and medicine in post-war Britain have yet to be explored. Contagious Communities casts new light on a period which is beginning to attract significant historical interest. Roberta Bivins draws attention to the importance - but also thelimitations - of medical knowledge, approaches, and professionals in mediating post-war British responses to race, ethnicity, and the emergence of new and distinctive ethnic communities. By presenting a wealth of newly available or previously ignored archival evidence, she interrogates and re-balances thepolitical history of Britains response to New Commonwealth immigration. Contagious Communities uses a set of linked case-studies to map the persistence of race in British culture and medicine alike; the limits of belonging in a multi-ethnic welfare state; and the emergence of new and resolutely unimagined communities of patients, researchers, clinicians, policy-makers, and citizens within the medical state and its global contact zones.
Product Details
OUP Oxford
87780
9780198725282
9780198725282

Data sheet

Publication date
2015
Issue number
1
Cover
hard cover
Pages count
442
Dimensions (mm)
156 x 234
Weight (g)
828
  • Introduction: Medicine, Migration, and the Afterimage of Empire; Part I: Tuberculosis in Black and White: Medicine, Migration, and Race in Open Door Britain; Suspicions and Susceptibility: The Tuberculous Migrant, 1948-1955; Contained but not Controlled: Public Discontents, International Implications; Part II: At Once a Peril to the Population: Immigration, Identity, and Control; Smallpox, Social Threats, and Citizenship, 1961-6; Slummy Foreign germs: Medical Control and Race Relations, 1962-1971; Part III: Chronically Ethnic: The Limits of Integration in the Molecular Age; Ethnicity, Activism and Race Relations: From Asian Rickets to Asian Resistance, 1963-1983; Genetically Ethnic? Genes, Race, and Health in Thatchers Britain; Conclusion: Contagious Communities and Imperial Afterimages; Bibliography;
Comments (0)