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Science in the service of colonial agro-industrialism: the case of cinchona cultivation in the Dutch and British East Indies, 1852-1900
- Source :
- Studies in history and philosophy of biological and biomedical science, 47 Pt A, 12. Elsevier Limited
- Publication Year :
- 2014
-
Abstract
- The isolation of quinine from cinchona bark in 1820 opened new possibilities for the mass-production and consumption of a popular medicine that was suitable for the treatment of intermittent (malarial) fevers and other diseases. As the 19th century European empires expanded in Africa and Asia, control of tropical diseases such as malaria was seen as crucial. Consequently, quinine and cinchona became a pivotal tool of British, French, German and Dutch empire-builders. This comparative study shows how the interplay between science, industry and government resulted in different historical trajectories for cinchona and quinine in the Dutch and British Empires during the second half of the 19th century. We argue that in the Dutch case the vectors of assemblage that provided the institutional and physical framework for communication, exchange and control represent an early example of commodification of colonial science. Furthermore, both historical trajectories show how the employment of the laboratory as a new device materialised within the colonial context of agricultural and industrial production of raw materials (cinchona bark), semi-finished product (quinine sulphate) and plant-based medicines like quinine. Hence, illustrating the 19th century transition from 'colonial botany' and 'green imperialism' to what we conceptualise as 'colonial agro-industrialism'.
- Subjects :
- History
Science
Cinchona
Context (language use)
Laboratory revolution
Consumption (sociology)
Colonialism
German
Antimalarials
History and Philosophy of Science
Tropical Medicine
Economic history
Humans
Netherlands Indies
Industrial Revolution
Pharmaceutical industry
Netherlands
biology
Commodification
Quinine
Plant Extracts
Botany
Agriculture
History, 19th Century
General Medicine
History, 20th Century
biology.organism_classification
United Kingdom
language.human_language
Malaria
Product (business)
Law
language
Phytotherapy
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 13698486
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Studies in history and philosophy of biological and biomedical science, 47 Pt A, 12. Elsevier Limited
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....d16bdc6264e4113f50e4dcb609335845