Jose Amador 
Medicine and Nation Building in the Americas, 1890-1940 [EPUB ebook] 

支持

As medical science progressed through the nineteenth century, the United States was at the forefront of public health initiatives across the Americas. Dreadful sanitary conditions were relieved, lives were saved, and health care developed into a formidable institution throughout Latin America as doctors and bureaucrats from the United States flexed their scientific muscle. This wasn’t a purely altruistic enterprise, however, as Jose Amador reveals in
Medicine and Nation Building in the Americas, 1890-1940. Rather, these efforts almost served as a precursor to modern American interventionism. For places like Cuba, Puerto Rico, and Brazil, these initiatives were especially invasive.

Drawing on sources in Cuba, Puerto Rico, Brazil, and the United States, Amador shows that initiatives launched in colonial settings laid the foundation for the rise of public health programs in the hemisphere and transformed debates about the formation of national culture. Writers rethought theories of environmental and racial danger, while Cuban reformers invoked the yellow fever campaign to exclude nonwhite immigrants. Puerto Rican peasants flooded hookworm treatment stations, and Brazilian sanitarians embraced regionalist and imperialist ideologies. Together, these groups illustrated that public health campaigns developed in the shadow of empire propelled new conflicts and conversations about achieving modernity and progress in the tropics.


€19.99
支付方式

关于作者

Jose Amador is Assistant Professor of Latin American Studies at Miami University of Ohio.

购买此电子书可免费获赠一本!
语言 英语 ● 格式 EPUB ● 网页 232 ● ISBN 9780826520227 ● 文件大小 5.4 MB ● 出版者 Vanderbilt University Press ● 发布时间 2015 ● 下载 24 个月 ● 货币 EUR ● ID 5513853 ● 复制保护 Adobe DRM
需要具备DRM功能的电子书阅读器

来自同一作者的更多电子书 / 编辑

4,861 此类电子书