Making bodies modern: race, medicine and the colonial soldier in the mid-eighteenth century

The expansion of British imperial warfare during the middle of the eighteenth century provided motivation and opportunity for observations on British and native forces. The nature of military medicine, with its use of regimental returns and empirical observations about mortality rates of large group...

Disgrifiad llawn

Manylion Llyfryddiaeth
Prif Awdur: Charters, E
Fformat: Journal article
Iaith:English
Cyhoeddwyd: 2012
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author Charters, E
author_facet Charters, E
author_sort Charters, E
collection OXFORD
description The expansion of British imperial warfare during the middle of the eighteenth century provided motivation and opportunity for observations on British and native forces. The nature of military medicine, with its use of regimental returns and empirical observations about mortality rates of large groups of anonymous individuals, encouraged generalizations about differences between native and European bodies. As foreign, colonial environments accentuated European deaths due to disease during war-time, and as early modern medicine advised the use of acclimatized, native labour, the physical experience of eighteenth-century colonial warfare encouraged the recruitment of native forces as menial labourers under the direction of professional British soldiers. Although not inherently racial, such practices buttressed emerging social and cultural prejudices. In contrast to the traditional focus on intellectual writings on race and science during the modern period of nineteenth-century imperialism, Charters's article examines the experience of common men-rank-and-file soldiers-during the early modern period, demonstrating the relationship between developing empirical and scientific observations and burgeoning racial theories. © 2012 Copyright Taylor and Francis Group, LLC.
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spelling oxford-uuid:2c6582a2-e00b-4cd7-8a5f-d7d0c8d8b3db2022-03-26T12:36:54ZMaking bodies modern: race, medicine and the colonial soldier in the mid-eighteenth centuryJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:2c6582a2-e00b-4cd7-8a5f-d7d0c8d8b3dbEnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford2012Charters, EThe expansion of British imperial warfare during the middle of the eighteenth century provided motivation and opportunity for observations on British and native forces. The nature of military medicine, with its use of regimental returns and empirical observations about mortality rates of large groups of anonymous individuals, encouraged generalizations about differences between native and European bodies. As foreign, colonial environments accentuated European deaths due to disease during war-time, and as early modern medicine advised the use of acclimatized, native labour, the physical experience of eighteenth-century colonial warfare encouraged the recruitment of native forces as menial labourers under the direction of professional British soldiers. Although not inherently racial, such practices buttressed emerging social and cultural prejudices. In contrast to the traditional focus on intellectual writings on race and science during the modern period of nineteenth-century imperialism, Charters's article examines the experience of common men-rank-and-file soldiers-during the early modern period, demonstrating the relationship between developing empirical and scientific observations and burgeoning racial theories. © 2012 Copyright Taylor and Francis Group, LLC.
spellingShingle Charters, E
Making bodies modern: race, medicine and the colonial soldier in the mid-eighteenth century
title Making bodies modern: race, medicine and the colonial soldier in the mid-eighteenth century
title_full Making bodies modern: race, medicine and the colonial soldier in the mid-eighteenth century
title_fullStr Making bodies modern: race, medicine and the colonial soldier in the mid-eighteenth century
title_full_unstemmed Making bodies modern: race, medicine and the colonial soldier in the mid-eighteenth century
title_short Making bodies modern: race, medicine and the colonial soldier in the mid-eighteenth century
title_sort making bodies modern race medicine and the colonial soldier in the mid eighteenth century
work_keys_str_mv AT charterse makingbodiesmodernracemedicineandthecolonialsoldierinthemideighteenthcentury