K. C. Hanson, Andrew W. Dyck, Jaime L. Waters, H. Paynter, D. Zucker, Olegs Andrejevs, M. Porto, Wendel Sun, Alexander E. Stewart, S. Elliott, E. Stewart
{"title":"Book Reviews","authors":"K. C. Hanson, Andrew W. Dyck, Jaime L. Waters, H. Paynter, D. Zucker, Olegs Andrejevs, M. Porto, Wendel Sun, Alexander E. Stewart, S. Elliott, E. Stewart","doi":"10.1177/0146107920980935","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Fractured states: smallpox, public health and vaccination in British India is the first book-length treatment that details the development and implementation of public health policies to control smallpox in British India between 1800 and 1947. The book takes an interdisciplinary approach shaped by the collaboration of its three co-authors whose expertise in South Asian studies and history of medicine is legion. It is a significant contribution to the history of smallpox, and public health. Using vaccination as a case study, it also offers a fresh perspective in the political history of British India by delving into the complex machinery of the colonial government. It is, appropriately, a volume of Orient Longman’s New Perspectives in South Asian History in which it is followed by the smallpox story from India’s independence to its eradication on the Indian subcontinent: Sanjoy Bhattacharya’s Expunging variola: the control and eradication of smallpox in India 1947–1977 (2006). This work employs two principal analytic approaches that roughly divide the book into two halves. The first half is a detailed structural analysis of the development of smallpox controls and public health policies that ‘‘between 1890 and 1940 mirrored the fractured nature of the colonial Indian administrative structures’’(p. 9). By focusing on the interand intra-governmental economic and political relationships that shaped smallpox control strategies (vaccination, isolation, and infectious disease notification), the authors depart from the standard historiography that tends to blame the relatively slow uptake of vaccination in India on indigenous resistance, or British imperialism. The authors point out that historians constructing narratives around the colonizers and the colonized tend to focus on the concerns of the senior bureaucrats and scientists, laws and regulations, and in doing so have distorted the picture of the diverse and often conflicting in-the-field execution of state policies. In this book, race and religious opposition to vaccination, often featured in reports by British bureaucrats, are portrayed as proxy explanations for a more nuanced and contingent set of political interests, petty disputes within government agencies, and the diverse power relationships between all levels of government and, of course, the public. For example, they argue that tensions and conflicts arose frequently between British bureaucrats, and within government departments, such that even when adequate funds were available, vaccination was occasionally impeded by the competing interests of various government officials. This systems analysis sheds new light on the idiosyncratic uptake of vaccination technology in India throughout the period of study. The second half of the book explores the technical and medical history of vaccine research in India to explain trends in the perception and uptake of the different vaccination technologies. By the late nineteenth century, it was obvious to both Indian and British civil servants that western vaccination techniques and seed strains had to be adapted for the Indian sub-continent, due to the technical challenges of preserving and maintaining pure and reactive vaccine lymph. Government-supported provincial vaccine institutes became centres for such vaccine innovation. Vaccination and re-vaccination itself played a larger role in Indian strategies to control the disease because of the lack of infrastructure for quarantine, and because the","PeriodicalId":41921,"journal":{"name":"Biblical Theology Bulletin","volume":"51 1","pages":"47 - 64"},"PeriodicalIF":0.1000,"publicationDate":"2021-01-27","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.1177/0146107920980935","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Biblical Theology Bulletin","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1177/0146107920980935","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"RELIGION","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Fractured states: smallpox, public health and vaccination in British India is the first book-length treatment that details the development and implementation of public health policies to control smallpox in British India between 1800 and 1947. The book takes an interdisciplinary approach shaped by the collaboration of its three co-authors whose expertise in South Asian studies and history of medicine is legion. It is a significant contribution to the history of smallpox, and public health. Using vaccination as a case study, it also offers a fresh perspective in the political history of British India by delving into the complex machinery of the colonial government. It is, appropriately, a volume of Orient Longman’s New Perspectives in South Asian History in which it is followed by the smallpox story from India’s independence to its eradication on the Indian subcontinent: Sanjoy Bhattacharya’s Expunging variola: the control and eradication of smallpox in India 1947–1977 (2006). This work employs two principal analytic approaches that roughly divide the book into two halves. The first half is a detailed structural analysis of the development of smallpox controls and public health policies that ‘‘between 1890 and 1940 mirrored the fractured nature of the colonial Indian administrative structures’’(p. 9). By focusing on the interand intra-governmental economic and political relationships that shaped smallpox control strategies (vaccination, isolation, and infectious disease notification), the authors depart from the standard historiography that tends to blame the relatively slow uptake of vaccination in India on indigenous resistance, or British imperialism. The authors point out that historians constructing narratives around the colonizers and the colonized tend to focus on the concerns of the senior bureaucrats and scientists, laws and regulations, and in doing so have distorted the picture of the diverse and often conflicting in-the-field execution of state policies. In this book, race and religious opposition to vaccination, often featured in reports by British bureaucrats, are portrayed as proxy explanations for a more nuanced and contingent set of political interests, petty disputes within government agencies, and the diverse power relationships between all levels of government and, of course, the public. For example, they argue that tensions and conflicts arose frequently between British bureaucrats, and within government departments, such that even when adequate funds were available, vaccination was occasionally impeded by the competing interests of various government officials. This systems analysis sheds new light on the idiosyncratic uptake of vaccination technology in India throughout the period of study. The second half of the book explores the technical and medical history of vaccine research in India to explain trends in the perception and uptake of the different vaccination technologies. By the late nineteenth century, it was obvious to both Indian and British civil servants that western vaccination techniques and seed strains had to be adapted for the Indian sub-continent, due to the technical challenges of preserving and maintaining pure and reactive vaccine lymph. Government-supported provincial vaccine institutes became centres for such vaccine innovation. Vaccination and re-vaccination itself played a larger role in Indian strategies to control the disease because of the lack of infrastructure for quarantine, and because the
期刊介绍:
Biblical Theology Bulletin is a distinctive, peer-reviewed, quarterly journal containing articles and reviews written by experts in biblical and theological studies. The editors select articles that provide insights derived from critical biblical scholarship, culture-awareness, and thoughtful reflection on meanings of import for scholars of Bible and religion, religious educators, clergy, and those engaged with social studies in religion, inter-religious studies, and the praxis of biblical religion today. The journal began publication in 1971. It has been distinguished for its early and continuing publication of articles using the social sciences in addition to other critical methods for interpreting the Bible for contemporary readers, teachers, and preachers across cultural and denominational lines.