Mediterranean quarantines, 1750–1914: Space, identity and power
Abstract
Mediterranean quarantines investigates how quarantine, the centuries-old practice of collective defence against epidemics, experienced significant transformations from the eighteenth century in the Mediterranean Sea, its original birthplace. The new epidemics of cholera and the development of bacteriology and hygiene, European colonial expansion, the intensification of commercial interchanges, the technological revolution in maritime and land transportation and the modernisation policies in Islamic countries were among the main factors behind such transformations. The book focuses on case studies on the European and Islamic shores of the Mediterranean showing the multidimensional nature of quarantine, the intimate links that sanitary administrations and institutions had with the territorial organisation of states, international trade, the construction of national, colonial, religious and professional identities of political regimes.
Keywords
long 19th century; power; quarantine; mediterranean; space; identityISBN
9781526115546OCN
1029411397Publisher
Manchester University PressPublisher website
https://manchesteruniversitypress.co.uk/Publication date and place
2018Series
Social Histories of Medicine,Classification
European history
History and Archaeology
c 1500 onwards to present day
Social and cultural history
Society and Social Sciences
History of medicine
Pages
336Chapters in this book
- Chapter 8 Quarantine sanitization, colonialism and the construction of the ‘contagious Arab’ in the Mediterranean, 1830s–1900
- Chapter 6 Prevention and stigma
- Chapter 1 Quarantine and territory in Spain during the second half of the nineteenth century
- Chapter 4 Quarantine in Ceuta and Malta in the travel writings of the late-eighteenth-century Moroccan ambassador Ibn Uthmân Al-Meknassî
- Chapter 3 Mending “Moors” in Mogador