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Articles

Cholera revolts: a class struggle we may not like

 

Abstract

Few have studied cholera revolts comparatively, and certainly not over the vast terrain from Asiatic Russia to Quebec or across time from the first European cholera wave of the 1830s to the twentieth century. Scholars have instead concentrated on the first European cholera wave in the 1830s and have tended to explain cholera’s social violence within the political contexts of individual nations, despite these riots raging across vast differences in political landscapes from Czarist Russia to New York City but with similar fears and conspiracy theories of elites inventing cholera to cull populations of the poor. Moreover, the history of cholera’s social toxins runs against present generalizations on why epidemics spawn blame and violence against others. Cholera riots continued, and in Italy and Russia became geographically more widespread, vicious, and destructive long after the disease had lost its mystery. The article then poses the question of why historians on the left have not studied the class struggles provoked by cholera, with riots of 10,000, murdering state officials and doctors, destroying hospitals, town halls, and in the case of Donetsk, an entire city. Finally, the article draws parallels between Europe’s cholera experiences and those in West Africa with Ebola in 2014.

Acknowledgements

A version of this paper was first presented to the ‘Socialist Theory and Socialist Movements Lecture Series’ at the University of Glasgow on 10 March 2015. I wish to thank Vassiliki Kolocotroni, Martina King, and John Foster for their encouragement and critical comments. I also thank scholars at the Institute for the Advanced Study of Humanities at Edinburgh University, where I am an Honorary Fellow and have presented some of the ideas in this paper formally and informally.

 

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