The Cultivation of Whiteness: Science, Health, and Racial Destiny in AustraliaThe Cultivation of Whiteness is an award-winning history of scientific ideas about race and place in Australia from the time of the first European settlement through World War II. Chronicling the extensive use of biological theories and practices in the construction and "protection" of whiteness, Warwick Anderson describes how a displaced "Britishness" (or whiteness) was defined by scientists and doctors in relation to a harsh, strange environment and in opposition to other races. He also provides the first account of extensive scientific experimentation in the 1920s and 1930s on poor whites in tropical Australia and on Aboriginal people in the central deserts. "[Anderson] writes with passion, wit, and panache, and the principal virtues of The Cultivation of Whiteness are the old-fashioned ones of thoroughness, accuracy, and impeccable documentation. . . . [His] sensitive study is a model of how contentious historical issues can be confronted."--W. F. Bynum, Times Literary Supplement "One of the virtues of The Cultivation of Whiteness is that it brings together aspects of Australian life and history that are now more often separated--race and environment, blood and soil, medicine and geography, tropical science and urban health, biological thought and national policy, Aboriginality and immigration, the body and the mind. The result is a rich and subtle history of ideas that is both intellectual and organic, and that vividly evokes past states of mind and their lingering, haunting power."--Tom Griffiths, Sydney Morning Herald |
From inside the book
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... later years my in- terests would drift away from the history ( and practice ) of medicine in Aus- tralia , toward the study of American colonial medicine in the Philippines and American public health more generally . But now I looked ...
... later , it sometimes became diffused into the general , and more obscure , category of Caucasian , or else it was narrowed down to subtypes such as Nordic.5 Until the 1880s , then , being British im- plied a lineage ; after that ...
... later , Adelaide ? How was it possible to have a career as an expert on whiteness in the emerging institutions of medi- cine and science in Australia ? Why did notions of whiteness circulate so easily in these local contexts ? The scale ...
... later in terms of urban social pathologies , and then , in the early twentieth century , it was more often figured in opposition to supposedly disease - dealing non- white races . By the 1930s a medically informed bionational self ...
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Contents
Antipodean Britons | 11 |
A Cultivated Society | 41 |
No Place for a White Man | 73 |
The Making of the Tropical White Man | 95 |
White Triumph in the Tropics? | 139 |
Whitening the Nation | 165 |
From Deserts the Prophets Come | 191 |
Other editions - View all
The Cultivation of Whiteness: Science, Health and Racial Destiny in Australia Warwick Anderson No preview available - 2005 |