The Caribbean and the Medical Imagination 1764 1834

The Caribbean and the Medical Imagination  1764 1834
Author: Emily Senior
Publsiher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 305
Release: 2018-04-26
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9781108416818

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Significant study of colonial Caribbean literatures in the context of the high rates of disease and death in the region.

The Smell of Slavery

The Smell of Slavery
Author: Andrew Kettler
Publsiher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 259
Release: 2020-05-28
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781108490733

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Slavery, capitalism, and colonialism were understood as racially justified through false olfactory perceptions of African bodies throughout the Atlantic World.

Romantic Medicine and the Gothic Imagination

Romantic Medicine and the Gothic Imagination
Author: Laura R. Kremmel
Publsiher: University of Wales Press
Total Pages: 283
Release: 2022-04-15
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9781786838490

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This book debates a crossover between the Gothic and the medical imagination in the Romantic period. It explores the gore and uncertainty typical of medical experimentation, and expands the possibilities of medical theories in a speculative space by a focus on Gothic novels, short stories, poetry, drama and chapbooks. By comparing the Gothic’s collection of unsavoury tropes to morbid anatomy’s collection of diseased organs, the author argues that the Gothic’s prioritisation of fear and gore gives it access to nonnormative bodies, reallocating medical and narrative agency to bodies considered otherwise powerless. Each chapter pairs a trope with a critical medical debate, granting silenced bodies power over their own narratives: the reanimated corpse confronts fears about vitalism; the skeleton exposes fears about pain; the unreliable corpse feeds on fears of dissection; the devil redirects fears about disability; the dangerous narrative manipulates fears of contagion and vaccination.

A Caribbean Enlightenment

A Caribbean Enlightenment
Author: April G. Shelford
Publsiher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 405
Release: 2023-09-30
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 9781009360791

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Explores the intersection of Enlightenment ideas and colonial realities amongst White, male colonists in the eighteenth-century French and British Caribbean. For them, becoming 'enlightened' meant diversion, status seeking, satisfying curiosity about the tropical environment, and making sense of the brutal societies and the enslaved Africans.

The Freedom of Speech

The Freedom of Speech
Author: Miles Ogborn
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 320
Release: 2019
Genre: Oral communication
ISBN: 9780226657684

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The institution of slavery has always depended on myriad ways of enforcing the boundaries between slaveholders and the enslaved. As historical geographer Miles Ogborn reveals in The Freedom of Speech, no repressive tool has been as pervasive as the policing of words themselves. Offering a compelling new lens on transatlantic slavery, this book gathers rich historical data from Barbados, Jamaica, the United Kingdom, and North America to delve into the complex relationships between voice, slavery, and empire. From the most quotidian encounters to formal rules of what counted as evidence in court, the battleground of slavery lay in who could speak and under what conditions. But, as Ogborn shows through keen attention to the narratives and silences in the archives, if slavery as a legal status could be made by words, it could be unmade by them as well. A masterful look at the duality of domination, The Freedom of Speech offers a rich interpretation of oral cultures that both supported and constantly threatened to undermine the slave system.

The Nature of Slavery

The Nature of Slavery
Author: Katherine Johnston
Publsiher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 281
Release: 2022-09-15
Genre: Human beings
ISBN: 9780197514603

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Following a story from the Caribbean to the colony of Georgia through debates over the abolition of the slave trade and finally to the antebellum South, The Nature of Slavery demonstrates the pervasiveness of a groundless theory about climate, labor, and bodily difference that ultimately contributed to notions of race.

Dibia s World Life on an Early Sugar Plantation

Dibia   s World  Life on an Early Sugar Plantation
Author: William Jennings
Publsiher: Liverpool University Press
Total Pages: 224
Release: 2023-06-15
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781802076745

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Dibia was educated in Africa, stolen across the sea and sold into slavery. He spent the rest of his life on a sugar plantation, where he worked with Agoüya, drank Aboré’s rum, married Izabelle and had a son named Paul. This book tells the story of the community he lived in with a hundred others in a colonial outpost of the Caribbean. It depicts the everyday life of enslaved Africans and Native Americans in remarkable detail, showing their names, relationships, skills, health and interactions, as they contended with and resisted their enslavement. Most studies of plantation life examine well-established colonies in the century before abolition. This work provides a counterpoint by depicting the founding population of an African-American community in the early years of the industrial sugar plantation complex. Drawing on a planter’s manuscript, shipping records, missionary accounts and seventeenth-century scraps of paper, Dibia’s World will appeal to specialists as well as general readers interested in the early Atlantic world, Creole societies, slavery and African-American history.

The Yellow Demon of Fever

The Yellow Demon of Fever
Author: Manuel Barcia
Publsiher: Yale University Press
Total Pages: 296
Release: 2020-01-01
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780300215854

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A pathbreaking history of how participants in the slave trade influenced the growth and dissemination of medical knowledge As the slave trade brought Europeans, Africans, and Americans into contact, diseases were traded along with human lives. Manuel Barcia examines the battle waged against disease, where traders fought against loss of profits while enslaved Africans fought for survival. Although efforts to control disease and stop epidemics from spreading brought little success, the medical knowledge generated by people on both sides of the conflict contributed to momentous change in the medical cultures of the Atlantic world.