Health, sovereignty and imperialism: The Royal Navy and infectious disease in Japan’s treaty ports

During the 1860s and 1870s, the British Royal Navy was a major presence in Japanese treaty ports and influenced the development of public health in those cities in significant ways. This paper compares the Navy’s response to two of the major infectious disease issues in the treaty ports—cholera and...

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Главный автор: Harrison, M
Формат: Journal article
Опубликовано: University of the Philippines 2018
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author Harrison, M
author_facet Harrison, M
author_sort Harrison, M
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description During the 1860s and 1870s, the British Royal Navy was a major presence in Japanese treaty ports and influenced the development of public health in those cities in significant ways. This paper compares the Navy’s response to two of the major infectious disease issues in the treaty ports—cholera and venereal disease—with that of the Japanese. Its aim is to determine whether the presence of foreign powers that enjoyed significant extraterritorial rights served to stimulate or frustrate sanitary intervention. It is argued that while there was common ground between the approaches advocated and taken by the British and the Japanese in relation to venereal diseases, the British presence proved disruptive when it came to the control of cholera during the epidemic of 1877; an epidemic that appears to have originated on a British naval vessel.
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spelling oxford-uuid:7f600a11-9f83-4362-a72b-c3e75ca788d52022-03-26T21:16:29ZHealth, sovereignty and imperialism: The Royal Navy and infectious disease in Japan’s treaty portsJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:7f600a11-9f83-4362-a72b-c3e75ca788d5Symplectic Elements at OxfordUniversity of the Philippines2018Harrison, MDuring the 1860s and 1870s, the British Royal Navy was a major presence in Japanese treaty ports and influenced the development of public health in those cities in significant ways. This paper compares the Navy’s response to two of the major infectious disease issues in the treaty ports—cholera and venereal disease—with that of the Japanese. Its aim is to determine whether the presence of foreign powers that enjoyed significant extraterritorial rights served to stimulate or frustrate sanitary intervention. It is argued that while there was common ground between the approaches advocated and taken by the British and the Japanese in relation to venereal diseases, the British presence proved disruptive when it came to the control of cholera during the epidemic of 1877; an epidemic that appears to have originated on a British naval vessel.
spellingShingle Harrison, M
Health, sovereignty and imperialism: The Royal Navy and infectious disease in Japan’s treaty ports
title Health, sovereignty and imperialism: The Royal Navy and infectious disease in Japan’s treaty ports
title_full Health, sovereignty and imperialism: The Royal Navy and infectious disease in Japan’s treaty ports
title_fullStr Health, sovereignty and imperialism: The Royal Navy and infectious disease in Japan’s treaty ports
title_full_unstemmed Health, sovereignty and imperialism: The Royal Navy and infectious disease in Japan’s treaty ports
title_short Health, sovereignty and imperialism: The Royal Navy and infectious disease in Japan’s treaty ports
title_sort health sovereignty and imperialism the royal navy and infectious disease in japan s treaty ports
work_keys_str_mv AT harrisonm healthsovereigntyandimperialismtheroyalnavyandinfectiousdiseaseinjapanstreatyports