Close
  • All
  • Centres
  • Courses
  • Events
  • News
  • People
  • Projects
Seminar
series event

British naval surgeons and tropical hygiene in the long nineteenth century

Examination of how the treatment of British seamen aided the development of tropical hygiene in the long nineteenth century.

LSHTM Event

This presentation explores how the treatment of British seamen aided the development of tropical hygiene in the long nineteenth century. The paper will be of interest to staff and students who want to know more about the history of British naval and maritime medicine, as well as the broader histories of tropical medicine, race, and empire.

This paper explores the dynamic nature of British naval medicine in the tropics, which stemmed from the ability of surgeons to travel, experiment, and observe patients in the Indian ocean. It discusses how acquired knowledge of maritime and tropical diseases was translated into a broad spectrum of preventive medicine, constituted through efforts to improve diet, sanitation, and hygiene. The presentation looks at the medical knowledge produced in Britain, in transit, and in India, exploring how the expression of racial pathology in maritime medical writings was rooted in ideas about the relationship between health, location and bodies in transit. Over the course of the nineteenth century, this relationship informed, among others, two major discussions: the impact of tropical climate on the physical constitution of the British body, and the development of climate- and body-specific preventive medicine. By illustrating the relationship between maritime medical innovation and the politics of public health, it examines how empirical observation and experimentation on the diseased bodies of British seamen aided the development of tropical hygiene.

Speaker

Dr Manikarnika Dutta

Manikarnika Dutta is Assistant Professor in the History of Medicine at University College Dublin. She is a historian of medicine and colonialism, with a specialist focus on the British Empire in Southeast Asia. Her doctoral research, which is currently being worked into a monograph, explored the history of health and sanitary regulation amongst European seamen in port cities across colonial India. Her postdoctoral research at the University of Oxford delved into malaria research and mortality in twentieth-century India. She also explored the significance of Christian missions for the health and welfare of the British maritime workforce at the University of Bristol.

Event notices

  • Please note that you can join this event in person or you can join the session remotely.
  • Please note that this session will not be recorded.

Admission

Admission
Free and open to all. No registration required.

Contact

Contact