"Living versus dead": The Pasteurian paradigm and imperial vaccine research |
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Authors: | Chakrabarti Pratik |
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Institution: | School of History, University of Kent, Rutherford College, Canterbury, UK. p.chakrabarti@kent.ac.uk |
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Abstract: | The Semple antirabies vaccine was developed by David Semple in India in 1911. Semple introduced a peculiarly British approach within the Pasteurian tradition by using carbolized dead virus. This article studies this unique phase of vaccine research between 1910 and 1935 to show that in the debates and laboratory experiments around the potency and safety of vaccines, categories like "living" and "dead" were often used as ideological and moral denominations. These abstract and ideological debates were crucial in defining the final configuration of the Semple vaccine, the most popular antirabies vaccine used globally, and also in shaping international vaccination policies. |
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