The first international leprosy conference, Berlin, 1897: the politics of segregation.
Indian J Lepr
;
2004 Jan-Mar; 76(1): 51-70
Article
in English
| IMSEAR
| ID: sea-54818
ABSTRACT
The present paper examines the first attempts to internationalise the problem of leprosy, a subject hitherto overlooked by historians of imperialism and disease. The last decade of the nineteenth century saw many in the civilised countries of the imperialist West gripped by a paranoia about an invasion of leprosy via germ-laden immigrants and returning expatriates who had acquired the infection in leprosy endemic colonial possessions. Such alarmists clamoured for the adoption of vigorous leper segregation policies in such colonies. But the contagiousness of leprosy did not go unquestioned by other westerners. The convocation in Berlin of the first international meeting on leprosy revealed the interplay of differing and sometimes incompatible views about the containment of leprosy by segregation. The roles of officials from several countries, as well as the roles of five protagonists (Albert Ashmead, Jules Goldschmidt, Edvard Ehlers. Armauer Hansen, and Phineas Abraham) in the shaping of the Berlin Conference are here examined.
Full text:
Available
Index:
IMSEAR (South-East Asia)
Main subject:
Politics
/
Prejudice
/
Humans
/
Congresses as Topic
/
History, 19th Century
/
Emigration and Immigration
/
Europe
/
Leprosy
Country/Region as subject:
Europa
Language:
English
Journal:
Indian J Lepr
Journal subject:
Tropical Medicine
Year:
2004
Type:
Article
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