Abstract
This paper explores questions related to yellow fever and the political destiny of Cuba in the late nineteenth century. A forgotten therapeutic device to treat the disease invented in that period, the "polar chamber" (cámara polar), provides a useful standpoint for reconstructing the tradition of Spanish yellow fever research in Cuba, a topic largely neglected by the medical historiography. The failed history of this device can also illuminate the complex struggle for scientific hegemony between Spanish, Cuban, and US institutions and researchers. Finally, we focus on the politics of the polar chamber by analyzing how this invention intended to provide a particular solution for the complex, threefold struggle for Cuba's political future.
Highlights
This paper explores questions related to yellow fever and the political destiny of Cuba in the late nineteenth century
During the first Pan-American Medical Congress held in Washington DC in September 1893, Pedro Peñuelas, inspector of the Spanish Army Medical Service in Cuba (SAMSC), presented the research done in Havana on a novel therapy for yellow fever: the cámara polar
Peñuelas took this opportunity to claim that the SAMSC had “always participated in the research devoted to yellow fever, testing all treatments proposed by the scientific community, and [that] this country’s [Cuba’s] authorities have always sponsored those tests” (Peñuelas, 1895a, p.445)
Summary
Not a polar island: yellow fever, Spanish medical research, and the struggle for scientific and political hegemony in late nineteenth century Cuba. Não se trata de uma ilha polar: febre amarela, pesquisa médica espanhola, e a luta pela hegemonia científica e política em Cuba no final do século XIX
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