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'An Unusual and Fast Disappearing Opportunity': Infectious Disease, Indigenous Populations, and New Biomedical Knowledge in Amazonia, 1960–1970

机译:“一个不寻常且迅速消失的机会”:1960-1970年亚马逊河地区的传染病,土著居民和新生物医学知识

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In the twentieth century, biomedical researchers believed the study of Indigenous Amazonians could inform global histories of human biological diversity. This paper examines the similarities and differences of two approaches to this midcentury biomedical research, comparing the work of virologist and epidemiologist Francis Black with human geneticists James V. Neel and Francisco Salzano. While both groups were interested in Indigenous populations as representatives of the past, their perspectives on epidemics diverged. For Black, outbreaks of infectious diseases were central to his methodological and theoretical interests; for Neel and Salzano, epidemics could potentially compromise the epistemological value of their data.
机译:在20世纪,生物医学研究人员认为,对土著亚马逊人的研究可以为人类生物多样性的全球历史提供参考。本文研究了本世纪中叶生物医学研究的两种方法的异同,比较了病毒学家和流行病学家弗朗西斯·布莱克(Francis Black)与人类遗传学家詹姆斯·V·尼尔(James V. Neel)和弗朗西斯科·萨尔扎诺(Francisco Salzano)的工作。尽管这两个群体都对土著人民作为过去的代表感兴趣,但他们对流行病的看法却有分歧。对于布莱克来说,传染病的爆发对他的方法论和理论意义至关重要。对于Neel和Salzano而言,流行病有可能损害其数据的认识论价值。

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