Disease,Microbiology, and the Construction of a Colonial Space: Romania and the Central Powers in the First World War |
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Authors: | David Hamlin |
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Institution: | Department of History, Fordham University, New York, NY, USA |
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Abstract: | Microbiology, developed in the decades before the First World War, encouraged a particular vision of disease and human social relationships. Some of the consequences of that can be seen in the way in which the Central Powers engaged with Romania during combat operations and during the occupation. Much as with colonial approaches to disease in tropical Africa, parasitology encouraged Germans to focus on bacteria and vectors of disease rather than on social relations or indigenous humans. As a consequence, medical care was segregated: it focused on protecting occupiers, and encouraged Germans to construct Romania and Romanians as colonial. |
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Keywords: | First World War microbiology parasitology Romania |
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