Vernacular medicine in colonial India : family, market, and homeopathy / Shinjini Das.

  • Das, Shinjini, 1982-
Date:
2019
  • Books

About this work

Description

Conceptualised in opposition to 'orthodox' medicine, homoeopathy, a western medical project originating in eighteenth-century Germany, was reconstituted as vernacular medicine in British Bengal. India went on to become the home of the largest population of users of homoeopathic medicine in the world. Combining insights from the history of colonial medicine and the cultural histories of family in British India, Shinjini Das examines the processes through which western homoeopathy was translated and indigenised in the colony as a specific Hindu worldview, an economic vision and a disciplining regimen. In tracing the localisation of German homoeopathy in a British Indian province, this book analyses interactions between Calcutta-based homoeopathic family firms, disparate contributors to the Bengali print market, the British colonial state and emergent nationalist governments. The history of homoeopathy in Bengal reveals myriad negotiations undertaken by the colonised peoples to reshape scientific modernity in the subcontinent.

Publication/Creation

Cambridge, United Kingdom ; New York, NY : Cambridge University Press, 2019.

Physical description

xiv, 292 pages ; 24 cm

Contents

A heterodoxy between institutions : bureaucracy, print-market, and family firms -- A family of biographies : colonial lives of a western heterodoxy -- A science in translation : medicine, language, identity -- Healing the home : indigeneity, self-help and the Hindu joint family -- Colonial law, electoral politics, and a homoeopathic public.

Bibliographic information

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Languages

Where to find it

  • LocationStatus
    History of Medicine
    CDW.23
    Open shelves

Permanent link

Identifiers

ISBN

  • 9781108420624