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Public Health and Epidemics in Madras: Cholera, Plague, and Urban Response MTA
Disease, colonial medicine, and municipal reform in a growing port city
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About this book:

Public Health and Epidemics in Madras: Cholera, Plague, and Urban Response *Public Health and Epidemics in Madras: Cholera, Plague, and Urban Response* explores the evolution of municipal governance and colonial medicine in Madras (now Chennai) through its encounters with devastating infectious diseases. The book argues that health crises were not mere interruptions to urban life but served as powerful catalysts for infrastructural and political change. By tracing the city’s transition from a vulnerable maritime gateway to a modernizing administrative hub, the narrative illustrates how the "Sanitary Idea" shifted urban management from ad hoc reactive measures to systematic engineering solutions, such as piped water systems, underground sewerage, and dedicated conservancy departments.

The text highlights the social and professional tensions inherent in colonial health policy. It examines the "politics of supply" regarding water and waste, the rise of statistical surveillance, and the birth of laboratory science at institutions like the King Institute. Central to the book is the friction between Western medical authority and indigenous "bazaar medicine," as well as the resistance sparked by draconian measures like forced quarantine and house inspections during the plague years. These interventions often exacerbated existing social fractures, as the burden of sanitary policing fell disproportionately on marginalized caste and class groups living in the city's *cheris* and slums.

The latter portion of the book focuses on the diversification of public health strategies, moving beyond coercion toward health education through posters, lectures, and cinema. It identifies the 1918 influenza pandemic as a critical turning point that exposed the limits of environmental sanitation against airborne pathogens, forcing a more nuanced understanding of respiratory contagion. By concluding with the "postcolonial turn," the book links colonial-era legacies—such as the Epidemic Diseases Act and specific urban planning models—to the persistent health challenges and governance structures of modern Chennai.

Ultimately, the book provides a comprehensive analysis of urban health as a crucible for citizenship and state power. It distills historical lessons on resilience, equity, and the necessity of community engagement in public health. By documenting the unglamorous labor of sweepers, nurses, and engineers alongside high-level policy debates, the work offers a multidimensional view of how a city remakes its physical and moral landscape in the shadow of recurrent pestilence.

What You'll Find Inside:
  • Examines how cholera and plague epidemics drove urban transformation in Madras, catalyzing infrastructural innovations in water supply, drainage, and sanitation systems that reshaped the city's physical landscape.
  • Analyzes the coexistence and tension between colonial Western medicine and indigenous healing practices (bazaar medicine), revealing how traditional Ayurvedic, Unani, and Siddha systems remained vital healthcare sources despite state efforts to establish medical authority.
  • Demonstrates how epidemics exposed and reinforced social hierarchies, with caste and class determining differential vulnerability to disease and access to resources, turning public health into a arena for debates about equity and justice.
  • Traces the evolution of public health governance, showing how health crises led to expanded state power through quarantine measures, house-to-house inspections, and legislation like the Epidemic Diseases Act of 1897, fundamentally altering state-subject relationships.
  • Explores the environmental infrastructure of disease, examining how tanks, canals, rivers, and coastal areas became critical sites where traditional water systems collided with modern sanitary ideals, creating persistent public health challenges.
Who's It For:

This book is essential for historians of medicine, colonialism, and urban studies seeking to understand how epidemics shape city development. It will particularly benefit public health officials, urban planners, and policymakers working in the Global South who grapple with infrastructure inequities and community engagement in health governance. Students and researchers studying South Asian history, epidemiology, and the social determinants of health will find valuable insights into the historical roots of contemporary urban health challenges.

Author:

Eric Price

Published By:

MixCache.com


Date Published:

March 29, 2026

Word Count:

42,257 words

Reading Time:

2 hours 58 minutes

Sample:

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