This essay is to be conceived in two parts. The first part is an exegesis of an eighteenth-century tract on the practice of smallpox inoculation in Bengal written by a Scottish medic. Cited repeatedly in the contemporary history and anthropology of smallpox in India, it has been invariably used to highlight the technique of inoculation in eighteenth-century India. Caught in disciplinary cleaving between anthropology and history, its original import has not been addressed. The exegesis in restoring the text to its intended import, argues that it offers a theory of smallpox, and in this theory the technique of inoculation is a moment in larger therapeutics.
Preparing for the Pox: A Theory of Smallpox in Bengal and Britain
by Harish Naraindas, Asian Journal of Social Science, 01 January, 2003
Preparing for the Pox: A Theory of Smallpox in Bengal and Britain
