The virus in the rivers: histories and antibiotic afterlives of the bacteriophage at the sangam in Allahabad.

IF 0.4 3区 哲学 Q3 HISTORY & PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE
Rijul Kochhar
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

The confluence (sangam) of India's two major rivers, the Ganges and the Yamuna, is located in the city of Allahabad. Ritualistic dips in these river waters are revered for their believed curative power against infections, and salvation from the karmic cycles of birth and rebirth. The sacred and geographic propensities of the rivers have mythic valences in Hinduism and other religious traditions. Yet the connection of these river waters with curativeness also has a base in historical microbiology: near here, the British bacteriologist Ernest Hanbury Hankin, in 1896, first described the 'bactericidal action of the waters of the Jamuna and Ganges rivers on Cholera microbes', predating the discovery of bacterial viruses (now known as bacteriophages) by at least two decades. Pursuing the record of these purificatory waters in sacred writings and folklore, and later elaboration in the work of Hankin, this paper traces an epistemology of time that connects the mythic to the post-Hankin modern scientific, asking how imaginations of the waters' antibacterial properties are articulated through idioms of faith, filth and the phage. The paper explores how the bacteriophage virus comes to be spoken about within secular and sacred epistemes of infection and riverine pollution, among contemporary historians, biologists and doctors, and in the city's museums. At the same time, it traces the phage in histories arcing from the ancient religious literature, to colonial disease control efforts, to today, where bacteriophages are being conceived as a potential response to the crisis of planetary antimicrobial resistance (AMR). Allahabad presents a 'cosmotechnics' where faith, filth and phage are inextricably intertwined, generating complex triangulations between natural ecologies, cultural practices and scientific imaginations. Cosmotechnics therefore opens up novel avenues to reimagine the phage as a protean object, one that occupies partial and multiple spaces in the historico-mytho-scientific arena of Allahabad today.

河流中的病毒:阿拉哈巴德sangam的噬菌体的历史和抗生素后遗症。
印度两条主要河流恒河和亚穆纳河的汇合处位于阿拉哈巴德市。人们在这些河水中进行浸浴仪式,因为人们相信它们具有治疗感染的功效,并能从出生和重生的业力循环中解脱出来。河流的神圣和地理倾向在印度教和其他宗教传统中具有神话般的价值。然而,这些河水与治疗性之间的联系也有历史微生物学的基础:在这里附近,英国细菌学家欧内斯特·汉伯里·汉金(Ernest Hanbury Hankin)在1896年首次描述了“贾穆纳河和恒河的水对霍乱微生物的杀菌作用”,比细菌病毒(现在称为噬菌体)的发现至少早了20年。本文追踪了神圣著作和民间传说中关于这些净化水的记录,并在汉金的作品中进行了详细阐述,追溯了一种时间认识论,将神话与后汉金时代的现代科学联系起来,探讨了对水的抗菌特性的想象是如何通过信仰、污秽和噬菌体的习语表达出来的。本文探讨了噬菌体病毒是如何在世俗和神圣的感染和河流污染知识中,在当代历史学家、生物学家和医生之间,以及在城市的博物馆中被谈论的。与此同时,它追溯了噬菌体的历史,从古代宗教文献到殖民地疾病控制努力,再到今天,噬菌体被认为是对全球抗菌素耐药性危机的潜在反应。阿拉哈巴德呈现了一种“宇宙技术”,信仰、污秽和噬菌体不可分割地交织在一起,在自然生态、文化习俗和科学想象之间产生了复杂的三角关系。因此,宇宙技术开辟了新的途径,将噬菌体重新想象为一个千变万化的物体,在今天的阿拉哈巴德的历史-神话-科学舞台上占据部分和多个空间。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
45
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Notes and Records is an international journal which publishes original research in the history of science, technology and medicine. In addition to publishing peer-reviewed research articles in all areas of the history of science, technology and medicine, Notes and Records welcomes other forms of contribution including: research notes elucidating recent archival discoveries (in the collections of the Royal Society and elsewhere); news of research projects and online and other resources of interest to historians; essay reviews, on material relating primarily to the history of the Royal Society; and recollections or autobiographical accounts written by Fellows and others recording important moments in science from the recent past.
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