Kropf Simone Petraglia
Casa de Oswaldo Cruz Fundação Oswaldo Cruz Avenida Brasil, 4036/400 21040-361, Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brasil.
Hist Cienc Saude Manguinhos. 2009 Jul;16 Suppl 1:205-27. doi: 10.1590/s0104-59702009000500010.
The article explores the relation between the debate on Chagas' disease, discovered in 1909, and Brazil's 1916-1920 rural sanitation campaign. It argues that the political planks of the sanitary movement were intimately bound up with the definition and legitimization of this illness as a scientific fact and social issue. Presented as emblematic of rural endemic disease, this 'new tropical ailment' was characterized as 'the disease of Brazil', symbol of a 'sickly country'. The sanitary campaign was in turn a decisive element of the 1919-1923 polemic surrounding the disease. This is an exemplary case of how Brazilian scientists used theories from European tropical medicine to produce original knowledge in the field, basing themselves on meanings specific to the national context of their day.
本文探讨了1909年发现的恰加斯病相关辩论与巴西1916 - 1920年农村卫生运动之间的关系。文章认为,卫生运动的政治纲领与将这种疾病定义为科学事实和社会问题并使其合法化密切相关。这种“新的热带疾病”被视为农村地方病的象征,被描述为“巴西的疾病”,是“多病之国”的象征。反过来,卫生运动又是1919 - 1923年围绕该疾病展开的论战的决定性因素。这是一个典型案例,展示了巴西科学家如何利用欧洲热带医学理论,基于当时本国背景下的特定意义,在该领域创造出原创知识。