Skip to product information
1 of 1

Charles Nicolle, Pasteur's Imperial Missionary

Regular price $45.95
Regular price $45.95 Sale price $45.95
Sold out
Kim Pelis uses a wide range of French and Tunisian archival materials and a close reading of Nobel Prize-winning bacteriologist Charles Nicolle's scientific papers and philosophical treatises to ex...
Read More
  • 15 April 2013
View Product Details
Kim Pelis uses a wide range of French and Tunisian archival materials and a close reading of Nobel Prize-winning bacteriologist Charles Nicolle's scientific papers and philosophical treatises to explore the relationship of scienceand medicine to society and culture in the first third of the twentieth century.

This book examines the biomedical research of Nobel Prize-winning bacteriologist Charles Nicolle during his tenure as director of the Pasteur Institute of Tunis. Using typhus as its lens, it demonstrates how the complexities of early twentieth century bacteriology, French imperial ideology, the "Pastorian mission," and conditions in colonial Tunisia blended to inform the triumphs and disappointments of Nicolle's fascinating career. It illuminates how thesediverse elements shaped Nicolle's personal identity, the identity of his institute, and his innovative conception of the "birth, life, and death" -- or, the emergence and eradication -- of infectious disease.
Kim Pelis blends exhaustive archival research with a close reading of Nicolle's written work -- scientific papers, philosophical treatises, and literary contributions -- to explore the complex relations between biomedical ideas and socioculturalcontext. The result is a study that will be of interest not only to students of French history, colonial medicine, and the history of the biomedical sciences but also to anyone seeking to understand how individuals have attemptedto deal creatively with complex times and ambiguous knowledge.

Kim Pelis, a medical historian by training, is a writer for the director of the National Institutes of Health.
files/i.png Icon
Price: $45.95
Pages: 418
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer Inc.
Imprint: University of Rochester Press
Publication Date: 15 April 2013
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781580464659
Format: Paperback
BISACs: BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / Medical (incl. Patients), Biography: science, technology and medicine, MEDICAL / History, MEDICAL / Infectious Diseases, History of medicine
REVIEWS Icon
Kim Pelis has written a magesterial biography of Charles Nicolle, the Nobel prize-winning microbiologist who demonstrated the louse-borne transmission of one of humankind's most dreaded scourges: typhus fever. But this beautifully written book covers so much more than Nicolle's exemplary scientific life. Indeed, it is a superb and scholarly exploration of late nineteenth and early twentieth century medicine, colonialism, international public health, and the social and cultural history of disease.
Prelude: The Substance of Shadows
Introduction: The Door of the Sadiki
Staring at the Sea: Nicolle and the Pasteur Institute of Tunis
The Threshold of Civilization: Typhus in Tunisia
Light & Shadow: Lousy War and Fractured Peace
Alliances: "Emperor of the Mediterranean"?
Invisible Forces: or, Action at a Distance
Reservoir Docs: Birth, Life, and Death of Infectious Disease
Mosaics of Power: Confronting Paris
At Home with My Shadows: Patrie de Nomade