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Palgrave Macmillan

Empire Under the Microscope

Parasitology and the British Literary Imagination, 1885–1935

  • Book
  • Open Access
  • © 2022

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Overview

  • ​Winner of the 2022 British Society for Literature and Science Book Prize
  • Pays particular attention to the social, linguistic, and material networks between literature and science
  • Establishes how scientific and literary narratives combined to shape popular understanding
  • This book is open access, which means that you have free and unlimited access

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Table of contents (7 chapters)

Keywords

About this book

This open access book considers science and empire, and the stories we tell ourselves about them. Using British Nobel laureate Ronald Ross (1857-1932) and his colleagues as access points to a wider professional culture, Empire Under the Microscope explores the cultural history of parasitology and its relationships with the literary and historical imagination between 1885 and 1935. Emilie Taylor-Pirie examines a wealth of archival material including medical lectures, scientific publications, popular biography, and personal and professional correspondence, alongside novels, poems, newspaper articles, and political speeches, to excavate the shared vocabularies of literature and medicine. She demonstrates how forms such as poetry and biography; genres such as imperial romance and detective fiction; and modes such as adventure and the Gothic, together informed how tropical diseases, their parasites, and their vectors, were understood in relation to race, gender, and nation. From Ancient Greece, to King Arthur’s Knights, to the detective work of Sherlock Holmes, parasitologists manipulated literary and historical forms of knowledge in their professional self-fashioning to create a modern mythology that has a visible legacy in relationships between science and society today.

Reviews

“Empire through the Microscope is an excellent monograph that will appeal to literary scholars, historians of medicine and empire, as well as to microbiologists and parasitologists interested in the history of their own fields, and many others besides.” (Aro Velmet, Metascience, Vol. 32 (2), 2023)

Authors and Affiliations

  • Leverhulme Trust EC Fellow, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK

    Emilie Taylor-Pirie

About the author

Emilie Taylor-Pirie is a Leverhulme Early Career Fellow at the University of Birmingham, UK. She has a BSc in Biology and higher degrees in the humanities.

Bibliographic Information

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