For All of Humanity: Mesoamerican and Colonial Medicine in Enlightenment Guatemala

For All of Humanity: Mesoamerican and Colonial Medicine in Enlightenment Guatemala

by Martha Few
For All of Humanity: Mesoamerican and Colonial Medicine in Enlightenment Guatemala

For All of Humanity: Mesoamerican and Colonial Medicine in Enlightenment Guatemala

by Martha Few

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Overview

Smallpox, measles, and typhus. The scourges of lethal disease—as threatening in colonial Mesoamerica as in other parts of the world—called for widespread efforts and enlightened attitudes to battle the centuries-old killers of children and adults. Even before edicts from Spain crossed the Atlantic, colonial elites oftentimes embraced medical experimentation and reform in the name of the public good, believing it was their moral responsibility to apply medical innovations to cure and prevent disease. Their efforts included the first inoculations and vaccinations against smallpox, new strategies to protect families and communities from typhus and measles, and medical interventions into pregnancy and childbirth.

For All of Humanity examines the first public health campaigns in Guatemala, southern Mexico, and Central America in the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. Martha Few pays close attention to Indigenous Mesoamerican medical cultures, which not only influenced the shape and scope of those regional campaigns but also affected the broader New World medical cultures. The author reconstructs a rich and complex picture of the ways colonial doctors, surgeons, Indigenous healers, midwives, priests, government officials, and ordinary people engaged in efforts to prevent and control epidemic disease.

Few’s analysis weaves medical history and ethnohistory with social, cultural, and intellectual history. She uses prescriptive texts, medical correspondence, and legal documents to provide rich ethnographic descriptions of Mesoamerican medical cultures, their practitioners, and regional pharmacopeia that came into contact with colonial medicine, at times violently, during public health campaigns.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780816532278
Publisher: University of Arizona Press
Publication date: 10/22/2015
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 320
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Martha Few is an associate professor of Latin American history at the University of Arizona. She is the author of Women Who Live Evil Lives: Gender, Religion, and the Politics of Power in Colonial Guatemala and co-editor of Centering Animals in Latin American History.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Medicine and Colonialism in Enlightenment Guatemala
1. Humanitarianism and Epidemic Death
2. Typhus and the Landscapes of Maya Medicine
3. Constructing Colonial Fetuses
4. How to Inoculate Indians
5. “This Marvelous Fluid”
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index
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