Clark J F M
Institute for Environmental History, University of St Andrews, St Andrews, Scotland, UK.
Parassitologia. 2008 Dec;50(3-4):321-8.
The golden age of medical entomology, 1870-1920, is often celebrated for the elucidation of the aetiology of vector-borne diseases within the rubric of the emergent discipline of tropical medicine. Within these triumphal accounts, the origins of vector control science and technology remain curiously underexplored; yet vector control and eradication constituted the basis of the entomologists' expertise within the emergent specialism of medical entomology. New imperial historians have been sensitive to the ideological implications of vector control policies in the colonies and protectorates, but the reciprocal transfer of vector-control knowledge, practices and policies between periphery and core have received little attention. This paper argues that medical entomology arose in Britain as an amalgam of tropical medicine and agricultural entomology under the umbrella of "economic entomology". An examination of early twentieth-century anti-housefly campaigns sheds light on the relative importance of medical entomology as an imperial science for the careers, practices, and policies of economic entomologists working in Britain. Moreover, their sensitivity to vector ecology provides insight into late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century urban environments and environmental conditions of front-line war.
医学昆虫学的黄金时代是1870年至1920年,这个时期常常因在新兴的热带医学学科框架内阐明了媒介传播疾病的病因学而受到赞誉。在这些辉煌成就的描述中,媒介控制科学技术的起源却奇怪地未得到充分探索;然而,媒介控制与根除构成了医学昆虫学这一新兴专业领域内昆虫学家专业知识的基础。新帝国史学家已意识到殖民地和保护国中媒介控制政策的意识形态影响,但边缘地区与核心地区之间媒介控制知识、实践和政策的相互转移却很少受到关注。本文认为,医学昆虫学在英国作为热带医学与农业昆虫学在“经济昆虫学”框架下的融合而兴起。对20世纪初的反家蝇运动进行考察,有助于了解医学昆虫学作为一门帝国科学对于在英国工作的经济昆虫学家的职业、实践和政策的相对重要性。此外,他们对媒介生态学的敏感性为深入了解19世纪末和20世纪初的城市环境以及一线战争的环境状况提供了线索。