Agents of Apocalypse: Epidemic Disease in the Colonial Philippines

Agents of Apocalypse: Epidemic Disease in the Colonial Philippines

by Ken De Bevoise
Agents of Apocalypse: Epidemic Disease in the Colonial Philippines

Agents of Apocalypse: Epidemic Disease in the Colonial Philippines

by Ken De Bevoise

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Overview

As waves of epidemic disease swept the Philippines in the late nineteenth century, some colonial physicians began to fear that the indigenous population would be wiped out. Many Filipinos interpreted the contagions as a harbinger of the Biblical Apocalypse. Though the direct forebodings went unfulfilled, Philippine morbidity and mortality rates were the world's highest during the period 1883-1903. In Agents of Apocalypse, Ken De Bevoise shows that those "mourning years" resulted from a conjunction of demographic, economic, technological, cultural, and political processes that had been building for centuries. The story is one of unintended consequences, fraught with tragic irony.

De Bevoise uses the Philippine case study to explore the extent to which humans participate in creating their epidemics. Interpreting the archival record with conceptual guidance from the health sciences, he sets tropical disease in a historical framework that views people as interacting with, rather than acting within, their total environment. The complexity of cause-effect and agency-structure relationships is thereby highlighted. Readers from fields as diverse as Spanish, American, and Philippine history, medical anthropology, colonialism, international relations, Asian studies, and ecology will benefit from De Bevoise's insights into the interdynamics of historical processes that connect humans and their diseases.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781400821426
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Publication date: 01/03/1995
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 328
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

Ken De Bevoise is Assistant Professor of History at Northwestern University.

Table of Contents

Preface
Acknowledgments
Map of Asia and the East Indies, 1875 2
Map of Philippine Provinces and Principal Islands, 1890 4
Introduction: Dimensions of the Crisis 6
Ch. 1 Probability of Contact 17
Ch. 2 Susceptibility 45
Ch. 3 Venereal Disease: Evolution of a Social Problem 69
Ch. 4 Smallpox: Failure of the Health Care System 94
Ch. 5 Beriberi: Fallout from Cash Cropping 118
Ch. 6 Malaria: Disequilibrium in the Total Environment 142
Ch. 7 Cholera: The Island World as an Epidemiological Unit 164
Conclusion: Intervention and Disease 185
Abbreviations Used in the Notes 191
Notes 193
Bibliography 247
Index 267

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