Images of leprosy produced in British Malaya offer a way to explore connections between medical photography and colonial ideology. Using postcolonial history of medicine and critical visual studies, this article looks at the role of visual images in the formulation of colonial policy on leprosy. Viewing photos of leprosy against the background of colonialism, the politics of segregation, and the global migration of Chinese and Tamil labourers, I argue that medical photos of leprosy during British Malaya were not only objects of clinical significance but also a site of colonial representation of racial Others and pathogenic migrant bodies. As a critical engagement with historical photos, this article re-reads images of leprosy along...
In this paper, the relation between humanity and disability is addressed by discussing the agency of...
This dissertation contrasts Hong Kong’s and the International Settlement’s management of malaria and...
This Position Piece examines the nature of Vietnamese folk constructions of leprosy t...
To the historian, the 'historical' experience of leprosy control is not simply a backdrop to contemp...
An innovative, interdisciplinary study of why leprosy, a disease with a very low level of infection,...
Colonial images of Africa include a strange set of photos depicting “sick bodies”. Photography was a...
This article is looking at colonial governance with regard to leprosy, comparing two settings of the...
In the past two decades, particularly, the gross inequities and violence of British colonialism have...
This essay assesses clinical photographs of leprosy patients created by the Hawai‘i Board of Health ...
Leprosy is one of the oldest known human diseases, recognized throughout the world. Leprosy causes s...
Leprosy is strongly stigmatized in South Asia, being regarded as a manifestation of extreme levels o...
This article explores the ways in which photography was used by the colonial state in Malaya to prom...
According to the Dutch colonizers in Suriname, leprosy (or Hansen’s disease) was highly contagious a...
The archives of colonial Southeast Asia and northern Australia contain hundreds of photographs of ma...
This dissertation examines global shifts in medical and religious thinking about leprosy, using the ...
In this paper, the relation between humanity and disability is addressed by discussing the agency of...
This dissertation contrasts Hong Kong’s and the International Settlement’s management of malaria and...
This Position Piece examines the nature of Vietnamese folk constructions of leprosy t...
To the historian, the 'historical' experience of leprosy control is not simply a backdrop to contemp...
An innovative, interdisciplinary study of why leprosy, a disease with a very low level of infection,...
Colonial images of Africa include a strange set of photos depicting “sick bodies”. Photography was a...
This article is looking at colonial governance with regard to leprosy, comparing two settings of the...
In the past two decades, particularly, the gross inequities and violence of British colonialism have...
This essay assesses clinical photographs of leprosy patients created by the Hawai‘i Board of Health ...
Leprosy is one of the oldest known human diseases, recognized throughout the world. Leprosy causes s...
Leprosy is strongly stigmatized in South Asia, being regarded as a manifestation of extreme levels o...
This article explores the ways in which photography was used by the colonial state in Malaya to prom...
According to the Dutch colonizers in Suriname, leprosy (or Hansen’s disease) was highly contagious a...
The archives of colonial Southeast Asia and northern Australia contain hundreds of photographs of ma...
This dissertation examines global shifts in medical and religious thinking about leprosy, using the ...
In this paper, the relation between humanity and disability is addressed by discussing the agency of...
This dissertation contrasts Hong Kong’s and the International Settlement’s management of malaria and...
This Position Piece examines the nature of Vietnamese folk constructions of leprosy t...