This paper explores the institution of the quarantine in relation to different modalities of power, and as a site of convergent mobilities: of people, pathogens, and knowledges. Focusing on public health measures to prevent the spread of infection in colonial Hong Kong (cholera, smallpox, bubonic plague), the paper shows how the segregation of diseased bodies became inseparable from efforts to demarcate the contours of ‘new’ scientific and political knowledges. The incarceration of bodies in the quarantine conflated with the sequestration of the scientific specimen: technologies of constraint made bodies visible in new ways. Viewing the history of infectious disease control in relation to material and emergent ‘disciplinary’ spaces in ...
From plague diary of Alexandre Yersin, who discovered the plague bacillus in July 1894. Photograph b...
The third pandemic of plague (in its bubonic and pneumonic clinical forms) struck the globe between ...
From plague diary of Alexandre Yersin, who discovered the plague bacillus in July 1894; Taipingshan ...
This paper examined whether the preventive measures taken by the Hong Kong’s colonial authorities we...
This paper examined whether the preventive measures taken by the Hong Kong’s colonial authorities we...
Between 1894 and 1926 bubonic plague raged on almost annual basis in Hong Kong, causing thousands of...
Drawing upon different source materials, this paper examines the significance of the plague of Hong ...
There is no surfeit of infectious disease or of epidemic events in Hong Kong’s history. Accounts of ...
This article examines French efforts to disrupt the transfer of 2000 Chinese remains from Sài Gòn-Ch...
This dissertation contrasts Hong Kong’s and the International Settlement’s management of malaria and...
This book is a history of London’s vast network of fever and smallpox hospitals, built by the Metrop...
This thesis comparatively assesses the nature of health, space, and culture in colonial Hong Kong an...
This paper forms part of the first comprehensive study of the history of dengue fever in Asia, and c...
The third pandemic of plague (in its bubonic and pneumonic clinical forms) struck the globe between ...
Bibliographical History:, Hendrick. Fighting the “Black Death” in Manchuria,’ World’s Work (1911): 2...
From plague diary of Alexandre Yersin, who discovered the plague bacillus in July 1894. Photograph b...
The third pandemic of plague (in its bubonic and pneumonic clinical forms) struck the globe between ...
From plague diary of Alexandre Yersin, who discovered the plague bacillus in July 1894; Taipingshan ...
This paper examined whether the preventive measures taken by the Hong Kong’s colonial authorities we...
This paper examined whether the preventive measures taken by the Hong Kong’s colonial authorities we...
Between 1894 and 1926 bubonic plague raged on almost annual basis in Hong Kong, causing thousands of...
Drawing upon different source materials, this paper examines the significance of the plague of Hong ...
There is no surfeit of infectious disease or of epidemic events in Hong Kong’s history. Accounts of ...
This article examines French efforts to disrupt the transfer of 2000 Chinese remains from Sài Gòn-Ch...
This dissertation contrasts Hong Kong’s and the International Settlement’s management of malaria and...
This book is a history of London’s vast network of fever and smallpox hospitals, built by the Metrop...
This thesis comparatively assesses the nature of health, space, and culture in colonial Hong Kong an...
This paper forms part of the first comprehensive study of the history of dengue fever in Asia, and c...
The third pandemic of plague (in its bubonic and pneumonic clinical forms) struck the globe between ...
Bibliographical History:, Hendrick. Fighting the “Black Death” in Manchuria,’ World’s Work (1911): 2...
From plague diary of Alexandre Yersin, who discovered the plague bacillus in July 1894. Photograph b...
The third pandemic of plague (in its bubonic and pneumonic clinical forms) struck the globe between ...
From plague diary of Alexandre Yersin, who discovered the plague bacillus in July 1894; Taipingshan ...