Ways of knowing the health of livestock populations: the age of surveys, 1928-65.

IF 0.9 2区 哲学 Q4 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES Medical History Pub Date : 2023-07-01 DOI:10.1017/mdh.2023.20
Abigail Woods
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Abstract

This article advances historical understandings of health, veterinary medicine and livestock agriculture by examining how, in mid-twentieth-century Britain, the diseases of livestock were made collectively knowable. During this period, the state extended its gaze beyond a few, highly impactful notifiable diseases to a host of other threats to livestock health. The prime mechanism through which this was achieved was the disease survey. Paralleling wider developments in survey practices, it grew from small interwar beginnings into a hugely expensive, wide-ranging state veterinary project that created a new conception of the nation's livestock as a geographical aggregation of animals in varying states of health. This article traces the disease survey's entanglements with dairy cows, farming practices, veterinary professional politics and government agendas. It shows that far from a neutral reflection of reality, surveys both represented and perpetuated specific versions of dairy cow health, varieties of farming practice and visions of the veterinary professional role. At first, their findings proved influential, but over time they found it harder to discipline their increasingly complex human, animal and disease subjects, resulting in unconvincing representations of reality that led ultimately to their marginalization.

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了解牲畜种群健康的方法:调查年龄,1928- 1965。
这篇文章通过研究在20世纪中期的英国,牲畜疾病是如何被集体认识的,推进了对健康、兽医学和畜牧业的历史理解。在此期间,国家将目光从少数影响很大的法定疾病扩展到对牲畜健康的许多其他威胁。实现这一目标的主要机制是疾病调查。与调查实践的更广泛发展相平行,它从两次世界大战之间的小规模开端发展成为一个耗资巨大、范围广泛的国家兽医项目,创造了一个新的概念,即国家牲畜是不同健康状态的动物的地理聚集。这篇文章追溯了疾病调查与奶牛、农业实践、兽医专业政治和政府议程的纠缠。它表明,调查远非对现实的中立反映,而是代表和延续了奶牛健康的特定版本,各种农业实践和兽医专业角色的愿景。起初,他们的发现被证明是有影响力的,但随着时间的推移,他们发现越来越难以规范他们日益复杂的人类、动物和疾病主题,导致对现实的不令人信服的表述,最终导致他们被边缘化。
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来源期刊
Medical History
Medical History 医学-科学史与科学哲学
CiteScore
1.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
25
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Medical History is a refereed journal devoted to all aspects of the history of medicine and health, with the goal of broadening and deepening the understanding of the field, in the widest sense, by historical studies of the highest quality. It is also the journal of the European Association for the History of Medicine and Health. The membership of the Editorial Board, which includes senior members of the EAHMH, reflects the commitment to the finest international standards in refereeing of submitted papers and the reviewing of books. The journal publishes in English, but welcomes submissions from scholars for whom English is not a first language; language and copy-editing assistance will be provided wherever possible.
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