Medicine is most often understood through the metaphor of war. We encounter phrases such as "the war against the coronavirus," "the front lines of the Ebola crisis," "a new weapon against antibiotic resistance," or "the immune system fights cancer" without considering their assumptions, implications, and history. But there is nothing natural about this language. It does not have to be, nor has it always been, the way to understand the relationship between humans and disease.
Medicine Is War shows how this "martial metaphor" was popularized throughout the nineteenth century. Drawing on the works of Mary Shelley, Charles Kingsley, Bram Stoker, Arthur Conan Doyle, and Joseph Conrad, Lorenzo Servitje examines how literary form reflected, reinforced, and critiqued the convergence of militarism and medicine in Victorian culture. He considers how, in migrating from military medicine to the civilian sphere, this metaphor responded to the developments and dangers of modernity: urbanization, industrialization, government intervention, imperial contact, crime, changing gender relations, and the relationship between the one and the many. While cultural and literary scholars have attributed the metaphor to late nineteenth-century germ theory or immunology, this book offers a new, more expansive history stretching from the metaphor's roots in early nineteenth-century militarism to its consolidation during the rise of early twentieth-century pharmacology. In so doing, Servitje establishes literature's pivotal role in shaping what war has made thinkable and actionable under medicine's increasing jurisdiction in our lives. Medicine Is War reveals how, in our own moment, the metaphor remains conducive to harming as much as healing, to control as much as empowerment.
Author(s): Lorenzo Servitje
Series: Studies in the Long Nineteenth Century
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Year: 2021
Language: English
Pages: 352
Tags: Literary Criticism, Critical Thinking, Literary Theory, Victorian Literature
Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
The Metaphor We Cure and Kill By
Disease Agents and the History of Medicine
The Martial Metaphor “in Theory”
Overview
Part 1
1. Denaturing the Emergent Martial Metaphor in Mary Shelley’s The Last Man
Cholera, Contagionism, and Military Medicine
The Humoral and Climatological Genealogy of Miasma as Invasion
On the Nature of the Pestilential Sublime and Shipwrecked Humanity
2. Charles Kingsley Meets Cholera Face-to-Face
Threatening “Us” and “Ours”
Mothers, Wives, and Nurses
God’s Breath: Original Sin, Inimical Nature, and Biopolitics
Part 2
3. Military Pasts and Medical Futures in Bram Stoker’s Dracula
Consecrating Blood and Soil
The “Stimulating” and “Bracing” Work of the Contagious Diseases Acts
Opportunistic Infections, Polyvalent Etiologies
4. Arthur Conan Doyle’s Imperial Armamentarium
I
Detecting Microbial and Imperial Threats
Toxicology and “Experiments of Destruction”
Conan Doyle and Robert Koch’s Battle with Tuberculosis
II
On the Front Lines of the Boer War
The Biopolitical Labs of Modernity in South Africa
Biological Warfare and Military Fitness
5. Modernist Refractions of Tropical Medicine in Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness
The “Civilizing” Mission to Beat Down Africa’s Natural Defenses
Germs of Empire
Coloniopathic Work and Necropower
The Legacy of War and the Congo in Ehrlich’s Magic Bullets
Collateral Damage: An Afterword
Addendum: A Surge of Epilogics in the Midst of the War against COVID-19
Notes
Bibliography
Index