Toxic Histories :Poison and Pollution in Modern India ( Science in History )

Publication subTitle :Poison and Pollution in Modern India

Publication series :Science in History

Author: David Arnold  

Publisher: Cambridge University Press‎

Publication year: 2016

E-ISBN: 9781316496824

P-ISBN(Paperback): 9781107126978

Subject: K3 Asian History

Keyword: 亚洲史

Language: ENG

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Toxic Histories

Description

Toxic Histories combines social, scientific, medical and environmental history to demonstrate the critical importance of poison and pollution to colonial governance, scientific authority and public anxiety in India between the 1830s and 1950s. Against the background of India's 'poison culture' and periodic 'poison panics', David Arnold considers why many familiar substances came to be regarded under colonialism as dangerous poisons. As well as the criminal uses of poison, Toxic Histories shows how European and Indian scientists were instrumental in creating a distinctive system of forensic toxicology and medical jurisprudence designed for Indian needs and conditions, and how local, as well as universal, poison knowledge could serve constructive scientific and medical purposes. Arnold reflects on how the 'fear of a poisoned world' spilt over into concerns about contamination and pollution, giving ideas of toxicity a wider social and political significance that has continued into India's postcolonial era.

Chapter

1 The social life of poisons

2 The imperial pharmakon

3 Panics and scares

4 Toxic evidence

5 Intimate histories

6 Embracing toxicity

7 Polluted places, poisoned lives

Conclusion

Bibliography

Index

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