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"A Putridness in the Air": Monsoons and Mortality in Seventeenth-Century Bombay

"A Putridness in the Air": Monsoons and Mortality in Seventeenth-Century Bombay Abstract: This essay examines the efforts of travelers such as John Fryer, John Ovington, and Alexander Hamilton, and physicians, including John Arbuthnot and James Lind, to explain the seasonal pathologies of the monsoonal tropics—the diseases that swept through late-seventeenth-century Bombay during the rainy season and again during the intense heat of the tropical summer. The high rates of mortality for merchants and sailors forced the British to reassess their fundamental assumptions about the relationships among climate, ecology, and human health. Lacking an understanding of microbial biology, the efforts of these writers to locate the sources of diseases assume a Hippocratic, cause-and-effect relationship between sick bodies and a pathogenic air. Yet the deadly illnesses they encountered in Bombay reveal the extent to which the tropics signify differently in the East and West Indies. In contrast to the Americas where cultivating land improves the climate, the diseases of the monsoonal tropics register the vulnerability of the British and, before 1757, the tenuousness of their position as interlopers at the margins of the Asian trade. Indian civilization had acclimated itself to the rhythms of trade and commerce dictated by the monsoons and thereby seems to lie outside of, and threaten, European moral and climatological economies. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Journal for Early Modern Cultural Studies University of Pennsylvania Press

"A Putridness in the Air": Monsoons and Mortality in Seventeenth-Century Bombay

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Publisher
University of Pennsylvania Press
Copyright
Copyright © University of Pennsylvania Press
ISSN
1553-3786
Publisher site
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Abstract

Abstract: This essay examines the efforts of travelers such as John Fryer, John Ovington, and Alexander Hamilton, and physicians, including John Arbuthnot and James Lind, to explain the seasonal pathologies of the monsoonal tropics—the diseases that swept through late-seventeenth-century Bombay during the rainy season and again during the intense heat of the tropical summer. The high rates of mortality for merchants and sailors forced the British to reassess their fundamental assumptions about the relationships among climate, ecology, and human health. Lacking an understanding of microbial biology, the efforts of these writers to locate the sources of diseases assume a Hippocratic, cause-and-effect relationship between sick bodies and a pathogenic air. Yet the deadly illnesses they encountered in Bombay reveal the extent to which the tropics signify differently in the East and West Indies. In contrast to the Americas where cultivating land improves the climate, the diseases of the monsoonal tropics register the vulnerability of the British and, before 1757, the tenuousness of their position as interlopers at the margins of the Asian trade. Indian civilization had acclimated itself to the rhythms of trade and commerce dictated by the monsoons and thereby seems to lie outside of, and threaten, European moral and climatological economies.

Journal

Journal for Early Modern Cultural StudiesUniversity of Pennsylvania Press

Published: Jun 19, 2010

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