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Disabled Empire: The Colonial Body in First World War Britain

Autor Hilary R. Buxton
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 2 iun 2026
Explores the minute interactions between military servicemen and medical caregivers during World War I to tell a broader story about race, colonialism, labor, and global health.
 
Disabled Empire examines how imperial precedents and racial ideologies shaped the medical treatments that the British state offered to several million Black and brown servicemen during World War I. In recovering the voices and experiences of these soldiers, Hilary R. Buxton illustrates how they navigated the institutional culture of the imperial military and how they helped to shape health and welfare systems well beyond the interwar period.
 
The Great War was the first time that troops and volunteers from nearly all reaches of the Empire participated in the war effort side-by-side. Despite official attempts at segregation, colonial troops met in trenches, mobile camps, casualty clearing stations, hospital ships, and convalescent homes. Just as importantly, those organizing treatment encountered men of different ethnicities, religions, and cultures from across and beyond the British Empire. For British officials, this moment offered an opportunity to remake colonial efficiency and medical knowledge. Yet, as Buxton shows, colonial servicemen were not passive subjects in a wartime laboratory: they were vocal participants who demanded a say in the therapies prescribed to them, the rations they required, the psychiatric care they received, and the prosthetics with which they were fitted. Together, these encounters profoundly remade colonial relations, reshaping imperial science, administration, and colonial understandings of subjecthood.
 
Disabled Empire pushes literature on the war and medicine outside its national, Eurocentric focus to confront the colonial logic of global health inequity.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780226847542
ISBN-10: 0226847543
Pagini: 304
Ilustrații: 20 halftones, 5 tables
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Ediția:First Edition
Editura: University of Chicago Press
Colecția University of Chicago Press

Notă biografică

Hilary R. Buxton is assistant professor of history at Kenyon College.

Cuprins

Preface
Acknowledgments
List of Abbreviations

Introduction
1. Bodies for War: Recruiting and Healing the Colonial Serviceman
2. Stomachs: Nutrition, Deficiency Disease, and Multiracial Rationing
3. Nerves: Mental Health and the Ethnicization of Military Psychiatry
4. Bones: Rehabilitation and the Project of Imperial Re-Membering
5. Bodies in the Aftermath: Pensions, Petitions, and Protest
Conclusion

Notes
Bibliography
Index

Recenzii

“Stomach, nerves, bones—Disabled Empire leaves no doubt about the way the violence of World War I left its imprint on the entire human system. Centering the embodied wartime experiences of colonial soldiers of color, Buxton takes up the entangled histories of trauma and treatment through practices of care and repair, modeling new ways of historicizing what ‘bodies for war’ meant in material and affective terms.”