Before heading to a 'tropical' region of the Empire, British men and women spent considerable time and effort gathering outfit believed essential for their impending trip. Ordinary items such as soap, clothing, foodstuffs and bedding became transformed into potentially life-saving items that required the fastidious attention of any would-be traveller. Everyone from scientists and physicians to missionaries and administrators was bombarded by relentless advertising and abundant advice about the outfit needed to preserve health in a tropical climate. A closer look at this marketing exercise reveals much about the way people thought about tropical people, places, health and hygiene and how scientific and commercial influences shaped this Imper...
In the past two decades, particularly, the gross inequities and violence of British colonialism have...
This timely book explores the troubled intertwining of religion, medicine, empire, and race relation...
Diseases such as malaria and the sleeping sickness jeopardized the feasibility of the European empir...
Before heading to a 'tropical' region of the Empire, British men and women spent considerable time a...
This thesis investigates several previously neglected networks of imperial tropical medicine (ITM) i...
As Britain's imperial and colonial ambitions intensified toward the end of the nineteenth century, t...
During the late Victorian and early Edwardian period a surge of commodities went on display and were...
The field of tropical medicine was the conscious, political creation of the Western industrial power...
Not long after the Atlantic slave trade was phased out in the Kongo region south of the river Zaire ...
This article traces the evolution of branded commodity advertising and consumption from corporeal he...
Prior to the nineteenth century, the boundary between pharmaceuticals used in medicine and recreatio...
In the nineteenth century, place bore immediately and urgently on questions of imperialism, race, an...
Summary. With greater numbers of medical missionaries and colonial state physicians in Britain’s tro...
Historians have extensively studied colonial doctors in Africa, and the connection between colonial ...
How were New World drugs received and understood in early modern England? In the seventeenth century...
In the past two decades, particularly, the gross inequities and violence of British colonialism have...
This timely book explores the troubled intertwining of religion, medicine, empire, and race relation...
Diseases such as malaria and the sleeping sickness jeopardized the feasibility of the European empir...
Before heading to a 'tropical' region of the Empire, British men and women spent considerable time a...
This thesis investigates several previously neglected networks of imperial tropical medicine (ITM) i...
As Britain's imperial and colonial ambitions intensified toward the end of the nineteenth century, t...
During the late Victorian and early Edwardian period a surge of commodities went on display and were...
The field of tropical medicine was the conscious, political creation of the Western industrial power...
Not long after the Atlantic slave trade was phased out in the Kongo region south of the river Zaire ...
This article traces the evolution of branded commodity advertising and consumption from corporeal he...
Prior to the nineteenth century, the boundary between pharmaceuticals used in medicine and recreatio...
In the nineteenth century, place bore immediately and urgently on questions of imperialism, race, an...
Summary. With greater numbers of medical missionaries and colonial state physicians in Britain’s tro...
Historians have extensively studied colonial doctors in Africa, and the connection between colonial ...
How were New World drugs received and understood in early modern England? In the seventeenth century...
In the past two decades, particularly, the gross inequities and violence of British colonialism have...
This timely book explores the troubled intertwining of religion, medicine, empire, and race relation...
Diseases such as malaria and the sleeping sickness jeopardized the feasibility of the European empir...