All Stories

  1. Filming Fore, Shooting Scientists: Medical Research, Experimental Filmmaking, and Documentary Cinema
  2. Ann Laura Stoler's durable interrogation
  3. Science in the Twentieth Century and Beyond
  4. Getting Ahead of One’s Self?: The Common Culture of Immunology and Philosophy
  5. Gut Reactions — From Celiac Affection to Autoimmune Model
  6. Roger Cooter. With Claudia Stein. Writing History in the Age of Biomedicine . xiv + 350 pp., illus., bibl., index. New Haven, Conn./London: Yale University Press, 2013. $45 (cloth).
  7. Hermannsburg, 1929: Turning Aboriginal “Primitives” into Modern Psychological Subjects
  8. The Frozen Archive, or Defrosting Derrida
  9. Imperial Contagions: Medicine, Hygiene, and Cultures of Planning in Asia. Edited by Robert Peckham and David M. Pomfret. Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press, 2013. xi, 307 pp. $25.00 (paper).
  10. Conquest and Pestilence in the Early Spanish Philippines
  11. Wandering anatomists and itinerant anthropologists: the antipodean sciences of race in Britain between the wars
  12. The Case of the Archive
  13. Fashioning the Immunological Self: The Biological Individuality of F. Macfarlane Burnet
  14. Hybridity, Race, and Science: The Voyage of the Zaca , 1934–1935
  15. Racial Hybridity, Physical Anthropology, and Human Biology in the Colonial Laboratories of the United States
  16. Infectious diseases in the bigger picture
  17. Scientific Patriotism: Medical Science and National Self-Fashioning in Southeast Asia
  18. Prusiner, Stanley B
  19. Editorial
  20. Unconscious Dominions
  21. Introduction
  22. Foreign Bodies
  23. Crap on the map, or postcolonial waste
  24. What's in a name? Experimental encephalomyelitis: ‘Allergic’ or ‘autoimmune’
  25. Not Quite White: White Trash and the Boundaries of Whiteness (review)
  26. From subjugated knowledge to conjugated subjects: science and globalisation, or postcolonial studies of science?
  27. The collectors of lost souls: turning kuru scientists into whitemen – By Warwick Anderson
  28. Reimagining Biology: The View from Papua New Guinea
  29. Re-orienting STS: Emergent Studies of Science, Technology, and Medicine in Southeast Asia
  30. Ambiguities of Race: Science on the Reproductive Frontier of Australia and the Pacific Between the Wars
  31. Review Forum
  32. Indigenous Health in a Global Frame: From Community Development to Human Rights
  33. How Far Can East Asian STS Go? A Commentary
  34. Warwick Anderson, The Cultivation of Whiteness: Science, Health, and Racial Destiny in Australia. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2006. x + 390 pp. ISBN: 978-0-8223-3840-6 (pbk.). $23.95.
  35. The Colonial Medicine of Settler States: Comparing Histories of Indigenous Health
  36. States of Hygiene
  37. Colonial Pathologies
  38. Introduction
  39. “Only Man Is Vile”
  40. Excremental Colonialism
  41. Disease and Citizenship
  42. Conclusion
  43. Notes
  44. Bibliography
  45. Index
  46. American Military Medicine Faces West
  47. The Military Basis of Colonial Public Health
  48. The White Man’s Psychic Burden
  49. Late-Colonial Public Health and Filipino “Mimicry”
  50. Malaria Between Race and Ecology
  51. Medicine and Colonial Identity (review)
  52. Empire of Care: Nursing and Migration in Filipino American History (review)
  53. Imperial Hygiene: A Critical History of Colonialism, Nationalism and Public Health
  54. Natural Histories of Infectious Disease: Ecological Vision in Twentieth-Century Biomedical Science
  55. Reviews
  56. The Cultivation of Whiteness: Science, Health and Racial Destiny in Australia
  57. Spreading Germs: Disease Theories and Medical Practice in Britain, 1865-1900
  58. Tropical knowledges
  59. Nature in the Global South
  60. States of nature / states in nature
  61. Postcolonial Technoscience
  62. A Global Scientist: Douglas H. K. Lee
  63. May the People Live: A History of Maori Health Development 1900-1920
  64. Time to Heal: American Medical Education from the Turn of the Century to the Era of Managed Care
  65. The Possession of Kuru: Medical Science and Biocolonial Exchange
  66. Infectious Diseases: Colonising the Pacific? (review)
  67. Perception of disease and its meanings
  68. Disease and Its Meanings
  69. Tropical Medicine in the Twentieth Century: A History of the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, 1898-1990
  70. Disease, Culture and History
  71. Where is the postcolonial history of medicine?
  72. The Trespass Speaks: White Masculinity and Colonial Breakdown
  73. Species and Specificity: An Interpretation of the History of Immunology Pauline M. H. Mazumdar
  74. Disease, Race and Empire
  75. Book Review: Agents of the Apocalypse: Epidemic Disease in the Colonial Philippines
  76. Immunities of Empire: Race, Disease, and the New Tropical Medicine, 1900-1920
  77. Excremental Colonialism: Public Health and the Poetics of Pollution
  78. Toward an unnatural history of immunology
  79. Patient use and assessment of conventional and alternative therapies for HIV infection and AIDS
  80. The New York needle trial: the politics of public health in the age of AIDS
  81. "Where Every Prospect Pleases and Only Man Is Vile": Laboratory Medicine as Colonial Discourse
  82. Securing a Brain: The Contested Meanings of Kuru
  83. Acute theophylline intoxication