[Railroads, disease, and tropical medicine in Brazil under the First Republic].

Hist Cienc Saude Manguinhos

Casa de Oswaldo Cruz/Fundação Oswaldo Cruz, Rio de Janeiro, Brasil.

Published: April 2009

The article explores the impact of malaria on infrastructure works--above all, railroads--under the republican drive towards modernization. Railways helped tie the territory together and foster the symbolic and material expansion of the Brazilian nation. The scientists entrusted with vanquishing such epidemic outbreaks did not just conduct campaigns; they also undertook painstaking observations of aspects of the disease, including its relations to hosts and the environment, thus contributing to the production of new knowledge of malaria and to the institutionalization of a new field in Brazil, then taking root in Europe's colonies: "tropical medicine." The article shows the ties between these innovations (especially the theory of domiciliary infection) and the sanitary campaigns that helped the railways, which in the 1920s were followed by a new phase in Brazil's anti-malaria efforts.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/s0104-59702008000300009DOI Listing

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