This dissertation explores the effects of late-nineteenth and early-twentieth century colonialism on seemingly apolitical and scientific institutions in Puerto Rico, namely those surrounding medicine and disease. I argue that understanding colonialism in Puerto Rico means taking Puerto Ricans' agency seriously. In the case of medicine, disease, and public health, this agency was reflected by the shifting and competing debates of a variety of groups who sought to bolster their claims to alternate visions of Puerto Rico's modernity and progress. This dissertation focuses on the class, ethnic and geographic bases of Puerto Rican physicians' debates on medicine, disease and public health. In the late-nineteenth century, urban criollo elite p...
Consistent with its civilizing mission, the United States sought to enhance healthcare development i...
After the United States became a world power at the end of the Spanish-Cuban-American War of 1898, i...
“Medical Modernity: Rethinking the Health Work of Filipina Women Under Spanish and U.S. Colonial Rul...
This dissertation explores the effects of late-nineteenth and early-twentieth century colonialism on...
This thesis explores the development of Puerto Rican public health institutions and policy from 1898...
Whether living in the United States (US) or the US Commonwealth of Puerto Rico (PR), a colonial terr...
After the United States became a world power at the end of the Spanish-Cuban-American War of 1898, i...
This dissertation examines American tropical medicine in the Philippines, and, in doing so, explores...
This article deals with the historical antecedents of the University of Puerto Rico (UPR) School of ...
This dissertation analyses the rise, fall, and rebirth of Spanish interest in indigenous medical kno...
This dissertation examines the long term effects of population control initiatives brought to the U....
In an excerpt from Medicine and Nation Building in the Americas, 1890–1940 (Nashville, TN: Vanderbil...
This essay introduces a series of five historical articles on the scientific and educational contrib...
Placing Civilization is about revealing the significant connections of progressive reform within the...
abstract: Over the past three decades, medical anthropology research, published within both public h...
Consistent with its civilizing mission, the United States sought to enhance healthcare development i...
After the United States became a world power at the end of the Spanish-Cuban-American War of 1898, i...
“Medical Modernity: Rethinking the Health Work of Filipina Women Under Spanish and U.S. Colonial Rul...
This dissertation explores the effects of late-nineteenth and early-twentieth century colonialism on...
This thesis explores the development of Puerto Rican public health institutions and policy from 1898...
Whether living in the United States (US) or the US Commonwealth of Puerto Rico (PR), a colonial terr...
After the United States became a world power at the end of the Spanish-Cuban-American War of 1898, i...
This dissertation examines American tropical medicine in the Philippines, and, in doing so, explores...
This article deals with the historical antecedents of the University of Puerto Rico (UPR) School of ...
This dissertation analyses the rise, fall, and rebirth of Spanish interest in indigenous medical kno...
This dissertation examines the long term effects of population control initiatives brought to the U....
In an excerpt from Medicine and Nation Building in the Americas, 1890–1940 (Nashville, TN: Vanderbil...
This essay introduces a series of five historical articles on the scientific and educational contrib...
Placing Civilization is about revealing the significant connections of progressive reform within the...
abstract: Over the past three decades, medical anthropology research, published within both public h...
Consistent with its civilizing mission, the United States sought to enhance healthcare development i...
After the United States became a world power at the end of the Spanish-Cuban-American War of 1898, i...
“Medical Modernity: Rethinking the Health Work of Filipina Women Under Spanish and U.S. Colonial Rul...