A peste que veio do mar: zonas litorais, doenças e curas (séculos XVI/XXI)

Detalhes bibliográficos
Autor(a) principal: Roque, Ana Cristina
Data de Publicação: 2022
Outros Autores: Garcia, Ana Catarina, Conceição, Gisele C., Amaral, Isabel, Palma, Monique, Fonseca, Luís Cancela da
Tipo de documento: Livro
Idioma: por
Título da fonte: Repositório Científico de Acesso Aberto de Portugal (Repositórios Cientìficos)
Texto Completo: https://hdl.handle.net/10216/146851
Resumo: In the mid-15th century, and with the increase in European sea travels, contacts between Europe and the rest of the world became regular. Ships became primarily responsible for intercontinental connections as well as for the circulation and transport of people and animals, raw materials and goods, knowledge and technology, diseases, pathogens, and healing practices. Long-distance travels shortened distances, brought people and places closer together, made ports and port cities privileged spaces of contact, exchange, and miscegenation. In Europe, the location and the hybrid nature of these spaces made them prone to entry and spread of new diseases, requiring local governments to create and implement prophylactic and health control measures. In the 18th century, reflecting an increasing globalization process, these concerns went far beyond the European universe. Colonial territories have become spaces for experimentation of control and prevention measures.These procedures have been consolidated, participating in a process of construction of medical knowledge and practices that benefited both from the development of European medical and pharmaceutical science, as well as from the incorporation of non-European knowledge and practices, made possible by contacts between geographically and culturally different peoples. In the Portuguese Empire, the coastal areas emerged as privileged spaces for observation and study of the building of this process. In there it was possible to regard identification and knowledge of diseases and local healing practices, resulting from the interaction with the native populations, or regarding the imposition of biomedical practices related to the European pharmacopoeia. The peculiar situation of these sea-land interface areas allowed a better insight into how the interaction between different knowledge and practices was stimulated in the different geographies of the Empire leading to define specific procedures to prevent and/or control spread of diseases, especially in the case of epidemics. Thus the sea also become a vehicle for circulation of agents (human and non-human) that, in certain situations, were central, as in the case of pathologies eradication program, enabling thinking about the various aspects of human/non-human interaction in the social construction of diseases. If recognizing a disease can be a quick process, finding causes and antidotes can be time-consuming and costly, in a space-time marked by advances, setbacks and disparate realities that even compromise the effectiveness of the solutions found, as evidenced by efforts and measures to contain the current COVID-19 pandemic. From this perspective, the true history of diseases in their relationship with coastal areas also calls for a discussion about the "health" of seas, rivers, and oceans that have not only determined and nurtured their existence, but have also contributed to generate new landscapes, and new relationships between human and non-human communities within them, and to demonstrate the link between marine and coastal ecosystems and human populations health.
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spelling A peste que veio do mar: zonas litorais, doenças e curas (séculos XVI/XXI)In the mid-15th century, and with the increase in European sea travels, contacts between Europe and the rest of the world became regular. Ships became primarily responsible for intercontinental connections as well as for the circulation and transport of people and animals, raw materials and goods, knowledge and technology, diseases, pathogens, and healing practices. Long-distance travels shortened distances, brought people and places closer together, made ports and port cities privileged spaces of contact, exchange, and miscegenation. In Europe, the location and the hybrid nature of these spaces made them prone to entry and spread of new diseases, requiring local governments to create and implement prophylactic and health control measures. In the 18th century, reflecting an increasing globalization process, these concerns went far beyond the European universe. Colonial territories have become spaces for experimentation of control and prevention measures.These procedures have been consolidated, participating in a process of construction of medical knowledge and practices that benefited both from the development of European medical and pharmaceutical science, as well as from the incorporation of non-European knowledge and practices, made possible by contacts between geographically and culturally different peoples. In the Portuguese Empire, the coastal areas emerged as privileged spaces for observation and study of the building of this process. In there it was possible to regard identification and knowledge of diseases and local healing practices, resulting from the interaction with the native populations, or regarding the imposition of biomedical practices related to the European pharmacopoeia. The peculiar situation of these sea-land interface areas allowed a better insight into how the interaction between different knowledge and practices was stimulated in the different geographies of the Empire leading to define specific procedures to prevent and/or control spread of diseases, especially in the case of epidemics. Thus the sea also become a vehicle for circulation of agents (human and non-human) that, in certain situations, were central, as in the case of pathologies eradication program, enabling thinking about the various aspects of human/non-human interaction in the social construction of diseases. If recognizing a disease can be a quick process, finding causes and antidotes can be time-consuming and costly, in a space-time marked by advances, setbacks and disparate realities that even compromise the effectiveness of the solutions found, as evidenced by efforts and measures to contain the current COVID-19 pandemic. From this perspective, the true history of diseases in their relationship with coastal areas also calls for a discussion about the "health" of seas, rivers, and oceans that have not only determined and nurtured their existence, but have also contributed to generate new landscapes, and new relationships between human and non-human communities within them, and to demonstrate the link between marine and coastal ecosystems and human populations health.20222022-01-01T00:00:00Zinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersioninfo:eu-repo/semantics/bookapplication/pdfhttps://hdl.handle.net/10216/146851porRoque, Ana CristinaGarcia, Ana CatarinaConceição, Gisele C.Amaral, IsabelPalma, MoniqueFonseca, Luís Cancela dainfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessreponame:Repositório Científico de Acesso Aberto de Portugal (Repositórios Cientìficos)instname:Agência para a Sociedade do Conhecimento (UMIC) - FCT - Sociedade da Informaçãoinstacron:RCAAP2023-11-29T13:35:09Zoai:repositorio-aberto.up.pt:10216/146851Portal AgregadorONGhttps://www.rcaap.pt/oai/openaireopendoar:71602024-03-19T23:43:13.492304Repositório Científico de Acesso Aberto de Portugal (Repositórios Cientìficos) - Agência para a Sociedade do Conhecimento (UMIC) - FCT - Sociedade da Informaçãofalse
dc.title.none.fl_str_mv A peste que veio do mar: zonas litorais, doenças e curas (séculos XVI/XXI)
title A peste que veio do mar: zonas litorais, doenças e curas (séculos XVI/XXI)
spellingShingle A peste que veio do mar: zonas litorais, doenças e curas (séculos XVI/XXI)
Roque, Ana Cristina
title_short A peste que veio do mar: zonas litorais, doenças e curas (séculos XVI/XXI)
title_full A peste que veio do mar: zonas litorais, doenças e curas (séculos XVI/XXI)
title_fullStr A peste que veio do mar: zonas litorais, doenças e curas (séculos XVI/XXI)
title_full_unstemmed A peste que veio do mar: zonas litorais, doenças e curas (séculos XVI/XXI)
title_sort A peste que veio do mar: zonas litorais, doenças e curas (séculos XVI/XXI)
author Roque, Ana Cristina
author_facet Roque, Ana Cristina
Garcia, Ana Catarina
Conceição, Gisele C.
Amaral, Isabel
Palma, Monique
Fonseca, Luís Cancela da
author_role author
author2 Garcia, Ana Catarina
Conceição, Gisele C.
Amaral, Isabel
Palma, Monique
Fonseca, Luís Cancela da
author2_role author
author
author
author
author
dc.contributor.author.fl_str_mv Roque, Ana Cristina
Garcia, Ana Catarina
Conceição, Gisele C.
Amaral, Isabel
Palma, Monique
Fonseca, Luís Cancela da
description In the mid-15th century, and with the increase in European sea travels, contacts between Europe and the rest of the world became regular. Ships became primarily responsible for intercontinental connections as well as for the circulation and transport of people and animals, raw materials and goods, knowledge and technology, diseases, pathogens, and healing practices. Long-distance travels shortened distances, brought people and places closer together, made ports and port cities privileged spaces of contact, exchange, and miscegenation. In Europe, the location and the hybrid nature of these spaces made them prone to entry and spread of new diseases, requiring local governments to create and implement prophylactic and health control measures. In the 18th century, reflecting an increasing globalization process, these concerns went far beyond the European universe. Colonial territories have become spaces for experimentation of control and prevention measures.These procedures have been consolidated, participating in a process of construction of medical knowledge and practices that benefited both from the development of European medical and pharmaceutical science, as well as from the incorporation of non-European knowledge and practices, made possible by contacts between geographically and culturally different peoples. In the Portuguese Empire, the coastal areas emerged as privileged spaces for observation and study of the building of this process. In there it was possible to regard identification and knowledge of diseases and local healing practices, resulting from the interaction with the native populations, or regarding the imposition of biomedical practices related to the European pharmacopoeia. The peculiar situation of these sea-land interface areas allowed a better insight into how the interaction between different knowledge and practices was stimulated in the different geographies of the Empire leading to define specific procedures to prevent and/or control spread of diseases, especially in the case of epidemics. Thus the sea also become a vehicle for circulation of agents (human and non-human) that, in certain situations, were central, as in the case of pathologies eradication program, enabling thinking about the various aspects of human/non-human interaction in the social construction of diseases. If recognizing a disease can be a quick process, finding causes and antidotes can be time-consuming and costly, in a space-time marked by advances, setbacks and disparate realities that even compromise the effectiveness of the solutions found, as evidenced by efforts and measures to contain the current COVID-19 pandemic. From this perspective, the true history of diseases in their relationship with coastal areas also calls for a discussion about the "health" of seas, rivers, and oceans that have not only determined and nurtured their existence, but have also contributed to generate new landscapes, and new relationships between human and non-human communities within them, and to demonstrate the link between marine and coastal ecosystems and human populations health.
publishDate 2022
dc.date.none.fl_str_mv 2022
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