With greater numbers of medical missionaries and colonial state physicians in Britain's tropical colonies at the turn of the twentieth century, British foreign missionaries are thought to have disengaged from medical work. This article redresses this misconception by investigating the training of missionaries in the new tropical medicine at Livingstone College, London, and their subsequent experiences throughout Britain's tropical empire. Many became active in preventative programmes, and were encouraged to spread the principles of modern tropical medicine along with the gospel. Nonetheless, missionaries trained at Livingstone College were not practising medicine that could be described as imperial or tropical. The bulk of their work was ba...
A CAJM article on the practice of tropical medicine.The practice of tropical medicine in London tend...
This thesis examines the thought, work, and impact of the Scottish medical missionary, Dr Neil Macvi...
This paper probes into the wide array of networks that shaped malaria control in the ...
With greater numbers of medical missionaries and colonial state physicians in Britain's tropical col...
Summary. With greater numbers of medical missionaries and colonial state physicians in Britain’s tro...
This thesis investigates several previously neglected networks of imperial tropical medicine (ITM) i...
This article discusses the introduction of the Anglican medical mission in 19th- century Sarawak. Mi...
Established in 1902, the West African Medical Staff (WAMS) brought together the six medical departme...
The field of tropical medicine was the conscious, political creation of the Western industrial power...
This article is an effort to understand how healing of body was used by the Christian missionaries a...
Imperial Fever: Tropical Medicine, British Literature, and the Return to South America, 1880-1930 ex...
This study discusses medical culture, colonialism and Christian mission in South-Central Africa thro...
Malaria, probably the oldest and most endemic human disease has alsoreceived the greatest attention ...
Historians have extensively studied colonial doctors in Africa, and the connection between colonial ...
A CAJM article on the practice of tropical medicine.The practice of tropical medicine in London tend...
This thesis examines the thought, work, and impact of the Scottish medical missionary, Dr Neil Macvi...
This paper probes into the wide array of networks that shaped malaria control in the ...
With greater numbers of medical missionaries and colonial state physicians in Britain's tropical col...
Summary. With greater numbers of medical missionaries and colonial state physicians in Britain’s tro...
This thesis investigates several previously neglected networks of imperial tropical medicine (ITM) i...
This article discusses the introduction of the Anglican medical mission in 19th- century Sarawak. Mi...
Established in 1902, the West African Medical Staff (WAMS) brought together the six medical departme...
The field of tropical medicine was the conscious, political creation of the Western industrial power...
This article is an effort to understand how healing of body was used by the Christian missionaries a...
Imperial Fever: Tropical Medicine, British Literature, and the Return to South America, 1880-1930 ex...
This study discusses medical culture, colonialism and Christian mission in South-Central Africa thro...
Malaria, probably the oldest and most endemic human disease has alsoreceived the greatest attention ...
Historians have extensively studied colonial doctors in Africa, and the connection between colonial ...
A CAJM article on the practice of tropical medicine.The practice of tropical medicine in London tend...
This thesis examines the thought, work, and impact of the Scottish medical missionary, Dr Neil Macvi...
This paper probes into the wide array of networks that shaped malaria control in the ...