ABSTRACT

This book highlights the role of acute hunger in malaria lethality in colonial South Asia and investigates how this understanding came to be lost in modern medical, epidemic, and historiographic thought.

Using the case studies of colonial Punjab, Sri Lanka, and Bengal, it traces the loss of fundamental concepts and language of hunger in the inter-war period with the reductive application of the new specialisms of nutritional science and immunology, and a parallel loss of the distinction between infection (transmission) and morbid disease. The study locates the final demise of the ‘Human Factor’ (hunger) in malaria history within pre- and early post-WW2 international health institutions – the International Health Division of the Rockefeller Foundation and the nascent WHO’s Expert Committee on Malaria. It examines the implications of this epistemic shift for interpreting South Asian health history, and reclaims a broader understanding of common endemic infection (endemiology) as a prime driver, in the context of subsistence precarity, of epidemic mortality history and demographic change.

This book will be useful to scholars and researchers of public health, social medicine and social epidemiology, imperial history, epidemic and demographic history, history of medicine, medical sociology, and sociology.

chapter |17 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|25 pages

The ‘Human Factor’ transformed

chapter 3|35 pages

Hunger eclipsed

Nutritional science in colonial South Asia

chapter 4|30 pages

The larger sanitationist context

chapter 6|31 pages

Malaria and the W.H.O.

The ‘Human Factor’ set aside

chapter 7|29 pages

Allure and legacies of the germ paradigm

chapter 8|33 pages

What was lost