Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
A Rat's Progress: Plague and the "Migratory Rat" in British India, 1896-1899.
- Journal:
- Journal of the history of medicine and allied sciences
- Year:
- 2025
- Authors:
- Lynteris, Christos
- Affiliation:
- University of St Andrews · United Kingdom
- Species:
- rodent
Abstract
Whether referring to oceanic travel on board of ships or to movement in terra firma, framings of the "migratory rat" formed a key epidemiological component of approaches to the Third Plague Pandemic (1894-1959) as the first pandemic to be understood as caused by a zoonotic disease. In this article, I examine the emergence and development of scientific framings of the migratory rat in the first, explosive years of the third plague pandemic in India (1896-1899). Examining publications and archival sources, I ask how this animal figure came to inform and transform epidemiological reasoning. Going beyond established approaches that have shown how the rat-plague relation was mobilised by colonial doctors to pathologise Indigenous lifeways, I argue that more complex and ambivalent processes were also set in motion by this figure. First, I show how the migratory rat became invested with attributes of invasiveness that assumed ontological qualities in colonial epidemiological reasoning. Second, comparing the migratory rat with the hitherto established "staggering rat," I argue that the former embodied new approaches to both space and time in epidemiology. Third, I show how Indigenous scientists came to mobilise this complex figure to contest colonial approaches to plague.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39661962/