Mishra Saurabh
University of Oxford.
Bull Hist Med. 2011 Winter;85(4):587-619. doi: 10.1353/bhm.2011.0089.
Assessments of colonial medicine in India have, until now, focused almost exclusively on questions related to human health. This article shifts attention to the subject of animal health and reexamines existing hypotheses about colonial medicine in India from this new perspective. It looks at the linkages between veterinary medicine and the military and fiscal policies of the colonial state, arguing that animal health in the larger colony remained neglected throughout the late nineteenth century as a result of these policies. In arguing this, the essay examines several areas related to veterinary medicine in India, including bacteriology, veterinary training, horse breeding, and disease control.
直到现在,对印度殖民医学的评估几乎完全集中在与人类健康相关的问题上。本文将关注点转移到动物健康主题,并从这个新视角重新审视关于印度殖民医学的现有假说。它考察了兽医学与殖民国家军事及财政政策之间的联系,认为由于这些政策,在整个19世纪后期,更大范围内殖民地的动物健康一直被忽视。在论证这一观点时,本文审视了与印度兽医学相关的几个领域,包括细菌学、兽医培训、马匹繁育和疾病控制。