Health, sovereignty and imperialism: The Royal Navy and infectious disease in Japan's treaty ports.

Social Science Diliman Pub Date : 2018-07-01
Mark Harrison
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Abstract

During the 1860s and 1870s, the British Royal Navy was a major presence in Japanese treaty ports and influenced the development of public health in those cities in significant ways. This paper compares the Navy's response to two of the major infectious disease issues in the treaty ports-cholera and venereal disease-with that of the Japanese. Its aim is to determine whether the presence of foreign powers that enjoyed significant extraterritorial rights served to stimulate or frustrate sanitary intervention. It is argued that while there was common ground between the approaches advocated and taken by the British and the Japanese in relation to venereal diseases, the British presence proved disruptive when it came to the control of cholera during the epidemic of 1877; an epidemic that appears to have originated on a British naval vessel.

健康、主权与帝国主义:日本通商口岸的皇家海军与传染病。
在19世纪60年代和70年代,英国皇家海军是日本条约港口的主要存在,并在很大程度上影响了这些城市公共卫生的发展。本文比较了美国海军对通商口岸的两种主要传染病——霍乱和性病的反应与日本海军的反应。其目的是确定享有重大治外法权的外国势力的存在是否有助于刺激或挫败卫生干预。有人认为,尽管英国和日本在性病方面所提倡和采取的方法有共同点,但在1877年霍乱流行期间,英国的存在被证明是破坏性的;一种似乎起源于英国军舰的流行病。
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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