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Race, Place, and Medicine examines the impact of a group of nineteenth-century Brazilian physicians who became known posthumously as the Bahian Tropicalista School of Medicine. Julyan G. Peard explores how this group of obscure clinicians became participants in an international debate as they helped change the scientific framework and practices of doctors in Brazil. Peard shows how the Tropicalistas adapted Western medicine and challenged the Brazilian medical status quo in order to find new answers to the old question of whether the diseases of warm climates were distinct from those of temperate Europe. They carried out innovative research on parasitology, herpetology, and tropical disorders, providing evidence that countered European assumptions about Brazilian racial and cultural inferiority. In the face of European fatalism about health care in the tropics, the Tropicalistas forged a distinctive medicine based on their beliefs that public health would improve only if large social issuessuch as slavery and abolitionwere addressed and that the delivery of health care should encompass groups hitherto outside the doctors sphere, especially women. But the Tropicalistas agenda, which included biting social critiques and broad demands for the extension of health measures to all of Brazils people, was not sustained. Race, Place, and Medicine shows how imported models of tropical medicineconstructed by colonial nations for their own needsdownplayed the connection between socioeconomic factors and tropical disorders. This study of a neglected episode in Latin American history will interest Brazilianists, as well as scholars of Latin American, medical, and scientific history.
- Format: Pocket/Paperback
- ISBN: 9780822323976
- Språk: Engelska
- Antal sidor: 328
- Utgivningsdatum: 2000-04-01
- Förlag: Duke University Press