Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgments
- List of Abbreviations
- Introduction: Bacteriology in the Tropics
- 1 Bacteriology in India: A Moral Paradigm
- 2 Moral Geographies of Tropical Bacteriology
- 3 Imperial Laboratories and Animal Experiments
- 4 “A Land Full of Wild Animals”: Snakes, Venoms, and Imperial Antidotes
- 5 Pasteurian Paradigm and Vaccine Research in India
- 6 Pathogens and Places: Cholera Research in the Tropics
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
Introduction: Bacteriology in the Tropics
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 February 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgments
- List of Abbreviations
- Introduction: Bacteriology in the Tropics
- 1 Bacteriology in India: A Moral Paradigm
- 2 Moral Geographies of Tropical Bacteriology
- 3 Imperial Laboratories and Animal Experiments
- 4 “A Land Full of Wild Animals”: Snakes, Venoms, and Imperial Antidotes
- 5 Pasteurian Paradigm and Vaccine Research in India
- 6 Pathogens and Places: Cholera Research in the Tropics
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
In 1894, on a summer morning in Calcutta, the Jewish-Russian scientist Waldemar M. Haffkine dressed formally in a suit and tie went out to vaccinate slum dwellers of the imperial city against cholera. He had built a small workplace nearby where he prepared his vaccines every day. His work started early in the morning when he and his Bengali assistant, Dr. Chowdhury, prepared the vaccines to begin inoculations before sunrise, before the slum dwellers left for their daily labor. Haffkine and his assistant worked in the blazing sun with an umbrella as cover. After a break in the afternoon, they met again in the laboratory to prepare more vaccines for the next round of inoculations and then set out once more for the slums in another part of the city. They remained there, inoculating until late in the night under the light of the chirag (oil lamps) provided by local residents.
In the slums of Calcutta, Haffkine was confronted with life and disease in the tropics. As he vaccinated the slum dwellers with his anticholera vaccines, he found that the lines between the laboratory and the world outside were often blurred. This was a novel experience for the European laboratory scientist:
For those who, in Europe or in any other places, will judge my work from the point of view of laboratory research, and will discuss the most convenient conditions for getting precise answers to theoretical questions, I must say from the beginning that I was not and am not master of the plan of my operations. […]
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- Bacteriology in British IndiaLaboratory Medicine and the Tropics, pp. 1 - 24Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2012