Unnamed, not unskilled: Toward a new labor history of pharmacy.

IF 1.1 3区 哲学 Q2 HISTORY & PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE
Zachary Dorner
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

By recovering the dependent, often enslaved, laborers who helped to make European medicines commercially available in the New England colonies, this article offers a new history of early American pharmaceutical knowledge and production. It does so by considering the life and labor of an unnamed, enslaved assistant who was said to make tinctures, elixirs, and other common remedies in a 1758 letter between two business partners, Silvester Gardiner, a successful surgeon and apothecary in Boston, Massachusetts, and William Jepson, his former apprentice, in Hartford, Connecticut. Using strategies from slavery and critical archive studies, as well as from social history and the history of medicine, this article emphasizes the materiality and embodiment of pharmaceutical production and follows fragmentary evidence beyond the business archive to reverse the systemic erasure of enslaved and indentured laborers from the records of eighteenth-century manufacturers of medicines. The medicine trades of men like Gardiner and Jepson appear more reliant upon dependent laborers - named and unnamed - who not only performed rote tasks but brought their experience and judgment to their labors as well. Their contributions could be obviously medical (preparing remedies) or more ambiguous (stoking fires, shipping goods), but these actions together constituted early modern pharmacy, enabled the expansion of the transatlantic medicine trade, and laid the foundations for the more self-sufficient and industrialized pharmacy that developed in the nineteenth century. Centering the skill and knowledge among subordinated laborers in one facet of an emergent transatlantic care economy affirms the entanglement of slavery and science and underscores the necessity of asking new questions of old sources.

无名,并非不熟练:走向新的药学劳动史。
这篇文章通过介绍那些帮助欧洲药品在新英格兰殖民地商业化的依赖劳工,通常是被奴役的劳工,提供了早期美国药物知识和生产的新历史。1758年,两位商业伙伴西尔威斯特·加德纳(马萨诸塞州波士顿一位成功的外科医生和药剂师)和威廉·杰普森(他以前在康涅狄格州哈特福德的学徒)之间写了一封信,信中提到了一位不知名的奴隶助手的生活和劳动,据说他制作酊剂、长生药和其他常用药物。本文利用奴隶制和批判性档案研究的策略,以及社会史和医学史的策略,强调了药品生产的物质性和具体化,并遵循商业档案之外的零碎证据,以扭转18世纪药品制造商记录中对奴隶和契约劳工的系统性抹去。像加德纳和杰普森这样的医药行业似乎更依赖于依赖的劳动者——有名字的和没有名字的——他们不仅完成死记硬背的任务,而且把他们的经验和判断力也带到他们的工作中。他们的贡献可能是明显的医学(准备药物)或更模糊的(生火,运输货物),但这些行动共同构成了早期的现代药学,使跨大西洋药品贸易的扩张成为可能,并为19世纪发展的更加自给自足和工业化的药学奠定了基础。将从属劳动者的技能和知识集中在新兴的跨大西洋护理经济的一个方面,肯定了奴隶制和科学的纠缠,并强调了对旧资源提出新问题的必要性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
History of Science
History of Science 综合性期刊-科学史与科学哲学
CiteScore
1.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
15
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: History of Science is peer reviewed journal devoted to the history of science, medicine and technology from earliest times to the present day. Articles discussing methodology, and reviews of the current state of knowledge and possibilities for future research, are especially welcome.
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