Malaria and the War Beyond the Western Front

Submitted by Glass Tank on November 8, 2016 - 12:01

Venue, Timing and Cost

Venue: 
Glass Tank
Date(s): 
Tuesday, 29 November 2016
Timing: 
4 - 5.30pm
Cost: 
FREE

SEMINAR:

To coincide with the Glass Tank exhibition, 'The War beyond The Western Front: Exploring Hidden Histories of the First World War', Prof. Mark Harrison presents:

'Malaria and the War Beyond the Western Front'

This talk will examine the British Army’s fight against one of its most implacable foes – the mosquito. In most theatres apart from the Western Front, malaria was an enormous drain on morale and military efficiency. It was by no means the only disease that led to heavy losses in theatres such as Salonika and the Middle East, but, along with venereal disease, it proved to be one of the most intractable. Wartime conditions worsened what was already, in many locations, an unfavourable situation as far as health was concerned. Preventive measures proved ill equipped to deal with these conditions, especially when troops were on the move. All armies suffered badly but ideas of racial immunity to malaria were used to justify the replacement of white troops in some theatres with ‘native’ troops from Britain’s imperial territories. This raised political tensions in territories such as India. The lecture will also consider the legacy of the war. The influx of many foreign troops, the destruction of infrastructure, and population displacement had a deep and enduring impact on the health of civilians.

Prof. Mark Harrison
- Professor of the History of Medicine, Director of the Wellcome Unit for the History of Medicine, University of Oxford.

Further Information

Contact Details: 

For more details, or to register your interest in this seminar, please email Tudor Georgescu: tgeorgescu@brookes.ac.uk

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