Tuberculosis in the nineteenth century was a big business in the British Empire. With the development of mineral spa towns in Australia, the promulgation of localities deemed to be the most suitable for the treatment of tuberculosis “meant there was no slow accretion of legend or folk medicine… it was always self-consciously scientific” in how sites were appraised and described.
A Platform on Representation, Engagement, and Community
Tag: health
Politics of Nature: Ventilation, Ideas of Health, and 18th-century British Military and Naval Hospitals
Embracing Intersectionality in the Age of Bad Data
Technology is an extension of societal mores and seeps into our lives, how we breathe, what we know, and how we move sometimes leaving an indelible digital mark.
Cows on the Colorado: The History of Dairy Colonialism and Mohave Health
Indian Affairs officials from Washington D.C. to the Lower Colorado River believed that milk, dairy, and beef (in other words, cows) would save the Indians in more than one way.