首页> 外文期刊>Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences >Notes from Batavia, the Europeans' Graveyard: The Nineteenth-Century Debate on Acclimatization in the Dutch East Indies
【24h】

Notes from Batavia, the Europeans' Graveyard: The Nineteenth-Century Debate on Acclimatization in the Dutch East Indies

机译:欧洲墓地巴达维亚的笔记:19世纪荷兰东印度群岛关于适应气候变化的辩论

获取原文
获取原文并翻译 | 示例
           

摘要

Since the advent of European colonial expansion, medical theories of acclimatization have been inextricably related to convictions about the possibility and desirability of white settlement in the colonies, and political ideas of colonial governance. Before 1800, acclimatization theories emphasized the inherent flexibility of the human constitution and its ability to adapt to new environments. During the first half of the nineteenth century, European theorists came to highlight the vulnerability of white Europeans in the tropics to disease, degeneration, and death instead. They consequently argued that white settlement in the tropics was impossible and inadvisable. European physicians in the British and French colonies presented similar views. By contrast, their colleagues in the Dutch East Indies remained optimistic. They associated themselves with the colonial European settler community and shared their grievances against autocratic colonial rule. They presented medical theories which related acclimatization to prudent behavior, morality, and proper management of the environment, thereby downplaying the significance of climate and high temperatures. During the following decades, their views on acclimatization were transferred to the Netherlands, where they were deployed as an argument against the cultivation system, the then-current approach of colonial governance, which emphasized the trade of cash crops grown by the indigenous population, severely limited European settlement, and curtailed the rights of Europeans living in the Indies. Throughout the nineteenth century, the influence of climate and the possibility of acclimatization became recurring themes in debates about colonial governance in both the Dutch East Indies and the Netherlands.
机译:自从欧洲殖民扩张以来,适应环境的医学理论就一直与人们对殖民地白人定居的可能性和愿望以及殖民统治的政治思想有着千丝万缕的联系。 1800年以前,适应化理论强调了人类体质的内在灵活性及其适应新环境的能力。在19世纪上半叶,欧洲理论家开始强调热带地区的白人欧洲人易患疾病,退化和死亡。他们因此辩称,在热带地区的白人定居是不可能的,也是不可取的。英法殖民地的欧洲医生也有类似的看法。相比之下,他们在荷兰东印度群岛的同事仍然乐观。他们与殖民地欧洲定居者社区联系在一起,并分享他们对专制殖民统治的不满。他们提出了医学理论,这些理论将适应与谨慎的行为,道德和对环境的适当管理相关联,从而淡化了气候和高温的重要性。在随后的几十年中,他们关于适应环境的观点被转移到荷兰,在荷兰被用作反对耕种制度的论点,耕种制度是当时的殖民统治方法,强调了土著居民种植的经济作物的贸易,限制了欧洲人的定居,并减少了居住在印度群岛的欧洲人的权利。整个19世纪,在荷兰东印度群岛和荷兰,关于殖民统治的辩论都反复出现了气候影响和适应气候变化的可能性。

著录项

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
  • 专利
获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号