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The Caribbean and the Medical Imagination, 1764–1834: Slavery, Disease and Colonial Modernity: 119 (Cambridge Studies in Romanticism, Series Number 119)

The Caribbean and the Medical Imagination, 1764–1834: Slavery, Disease and Colonial Modernity: 119 (Cambridge Studies in Romanticism, Series Number 119)

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Emily Senior
Cambridge University Press, 4/26/2018
EAN 9781108416818, ISBN10: 1108416810

Hardcover, 300 pages, 22.9 x 15.2 x 1.8 cm
Language: English
Originally published in English

During the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, the Caribbean was known as the 'grave of Europeans'. At the apex of British colonialism in the region between 1764 and 1834, the rapid spread of disease amongst colonist, enslaved and indigenous populations made the Caribbean notorious as one of the deadliest places on earth. Drawing on historical accounts from physicians, surgeons and travellers alongside literary works, Emily Senior traces the cultural impact of such widespread disease and death during the Romantic age of exploration and medical and scientific discovery. Focusing on new fields of knowledge such as dermatology, medical geography and anatomy, Senior shows how literature was crucial to the development and circulation of new medical ideas, and that the Caribbean as the hub of empire played a significant role in the changing disciplines and literary forms associated with the transition to modernity.

Communicating disease
literature and medicine in the Atlantic World
Part I. Health, Geography and Aesthetics
1. 'What new forms of death'
the poetics of disease and cure
2. The diagnostics of description
medical topography and the colonial picturesque
Part II. Colonial Bodies
3. Skin, textuality and colonial feeling
4. 'A Seasoned Creole' and 'a Citizen of the World'
White West Indians and Atlantic medical knowledge
Part III. Revolution and Abolition
5. The 'intimate union of medicine and magic'
Obeah, revolution and colonial modernity
Afterword
colonial modernities and after abolition.