Before the nineteenth century, travellers who left Britain for the Americas, West Africa, India and elsewhere encountered a medical conundrum:: why did they fall ill when they arrived, and why - if they recovered - did they never become so ill again? The widely accepted answer was that the newcomers needed to become seasoned to the climate. Suman Seth explores forms of eighteenth-century medical knowledge, including conceptions of seasoning, showing how geographical location was essential to this knowledge and helped to define relationships between Britain and her far-flung colonies. In this period, debates raged between medical practitioners over whether diseases changed in different climes. Different diseases were deemed characteristic of different races and genders, and medical practitioners were thus deeply involved in contestations over race and the legitimacy of the abolitionist cause. In this innovative and engaging history, Seth offers dramatically new ways to understand the mutual shaping of medicine, race, and empire.
Introduction; Part I. Locality:: 1:: The same diseases here as in Europe? Health and locality before 1700; 2. Changes in the air:: William Hillary and English medicine in the West Indies, 1720-1760; Part II. Empire:: 3. Seasoning sickness and the imaginative geography of the British Empire; 4. Imperial medicine and the putrefactive paradigm, 1720-1800; Part III. Race:: 5. Race-medicine in the colonies, 1679-1750; 6. Race, slavery, and polygenism:: Edward Long and the history of Jamaica; 7. Pathologies of blackness:: race-medicine, slavery, and abolitionism; Conclusion.
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