Book Read Free

The Ghost Map

Page 29

by Steven Johnson


  Medicine, in Victorian era, 45–46, 61

  and cholera, 68–69

  scientific method and, 97–98

  surgery, 62–63

  Megacities, 216–18

  Mekalanos, John, 246

  Methane gas, 2, 129–30, 133

  explosions, 8, 119

  Metropolitan Commission of Sewers, 119–20

  and cholera outbreak, 191–93

  Metropolitan life. See Urban life; Urbanization Mexico City, 3

  Miasma theory of cholera spread, 69–70, 74, 86, 121–28, 131–32, 204–5, 213–14

  biological basis, 128–31

  Board of Health and, 163–66

  and Broad Street pump, 140

  Chadwick and, 113–14

  confirmation bias, 186–87

  Farr and, 101–2

  Hall and, 183–84, 186–87

  maps and, 196–97

  power of, 134–35

  Snow and, 107–8, 144–48, 275–76n

  social prejudice and, 132–34

  Vestry Committee and, 182

  Microbes. See Bacteria Microscopes, 131

  Middlemarch (Eliot), 167

  Middlesex Hospital (London), 154

  Moore’s Law, 250

  Morning Chronicle (London), 51, 121, 134

  and Chadwick, 112

  Mayhew article, 10–11

  Morton, William, 63

  Mozart, Leopold, 18

  Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus, 18

  Mud-larks, 2

  Mumbai, Squatter Colony, 216

  Nash, John, 20

  Native Americans, and alcohol, 104

  Nausea, 129

  Neighborhoods, street-level knowledge, 225

  Netherlands, waste recycling and, 6

  Neuwirth, Robert, 216–17

  New River Water Company, 31, 105

  New York City, 87, 223, 238

  cholera outbreak, 85–86

  311 service, 222–24, 225

  911 system, 222–23

  New York Evening Post, 86

  Newspapers, in Victorian-era London, 83

  and cholera outbreaks, 85–86

  and medicine, 45–47

  See also specific newspapers

  Newton, Isaac, 149

  Newton, John Frank, 58–59

  Niche environments, in cities, 221–22

  Nicholas Nickleby (Dickens), 17

  Night soil, and night-soil men, 8–13

  Nightingale, Florence, 15, 127–28, 134, 154

  and miasma theory, 123–24

  9/11 attacks, 239–40

  Nonrenewable energy, urbanization and, 238–39

  Notes on Nursing (Nightingale), 123–24

  Nuclear weapons, 241–42, 253–54, 283–84n

  Nuisances Removal and Contagious Diseases Prevention Act, 118–19, 134, 177, 204

  Obituary of Snow, 206–7

  Observer (London), 83, 109

  and cholera deaths, 162

  Offensive trades, 145–46, 204

  Old Ford reservoir, 210–11

  On Air, Water, and Places (Hippocrates), 126–27

  On the Inhalation of the Vapour of Ether in Surgical Operations (Snow), 65

  On the Mode and Communication of Cholera (Snow), 74

  Opium, 48–49, 61

  Our Mutual Friend (Dickens), 2

  Owen, David, 238

  Pacini, Filippo, 99, 165, 213

  Pain management, Snow and, 62

  Pandemic, global, 243–44, 247–48, 249

  Paris, in nineteenth century, 9–10

  Parliament

  Farr’s testimony, 211–12

  Snow and, 204

  Thames pollution and, 205–6

  Pasteur, Louis, 266n

  Patent medicines, 46–47

  Penny Newsman (London), 95

  Pepys, Samuel, 117

  Percussion caps, 28

  Perpendadores, 3

  Pesthouse fields, 191

  Peter Street, cholera outbreak, 52–53, 170, 171

  Pets, in Victorian-era London, 28

  Phase transitions, human societies and, 93–94

  Phillips, Richard, 89

  Phrenology, 132

  Physicians, in Victorian era, 59–61, 268n

  Snow as physician, 61–62

  and treatment of cholera, 49–51

  Plague, government intervention and, 120–21

  Plague burial grounds, 191, 192

  Poland Street (Soho), cholera deaths, 142

  Poland Street Workhouse, 28, 82, 142, 153, 228

  Politics, network technology and, 224

  Poor Law Amendment Act of 1834, 265–66n

  Population Bomb, The (Ehrlich), 234

  Population control, cities and, 234

  Population density, 4–7, 224, 236

  and disease, 171

  and environment, 281–83n

  perils of, 240–54

  and transmission of cholera, 41–42

  urbanization and, 233–36

  in Victorian-era London, 18, 28

  Populations

  growth of, 84, 92, 94–95

  London, 1800s, 12–13

  statistics, 97

  urban, 231–34

  Portland (Oregon), 233

  Postal service, London, 82–83, 270n

  Posttraumatic stress disorder, 87

  Poverty, 85, 171, 232

  in developed world, 218

  in Victorian-era London, 265n

  “Predisposing” causes of disease, 132–33

  Prelude, The (Wordsworth), 90, 91

  Price gouging by drug companies, 48

  Progress, intellectual, 135, 149

  Prokaryotes, 264n

  ProMED-mail, 219

  Proust, Marcel, 128

  Public health, 255

  Chadwick and, 113–14, 118–21

  cities and, 232

  information networks, 218–19

  institutions, future of, 249

  statistics, Farr and, 100–101

  Public Health Act of 1848, 118

  Public infrastructure engineering, 218

  Pump, 158

  Broad Street. See Broad Street pump

  Punch, 63, 264–65n

  “Who Shall Decide When Doctors Disagree?” 50

  Pure, 2, 263–64n

  Pure-finders, 2, 4, 217–18, 263n

  Quack cures, 46–47, 267n

  Radcliffe, John Netten, 210, 226

  Railway system, 93, 271n

  Rakers, 8–9

  Reason, and superstition, 163

  Recycling of waste, 5–8, 115–16, 217–18

  Mayhew and, 273–74n

  Regent Street (London), 20–21, 26

  Registrar-General’s Office, 100, 136, 178, 209, 275n

  Religion, miasma theory and, 127

  Research, medical, in Victorian era, 46

  Snow and, 65

  Return to Nature: A Defence of the Vegetable Regimen, The (Newton), 58–59

  Richard the Raker, 9

  Richardson, Benjamin Ward, 156

  Richardson, James, 150–51

  Rio de Janeiro, Rocinha area, 216

  Robinson, James, 63

  Rogers, John, 53–54

  Rogers, Richard, 227

  Rogers, William, 22

  Rome, 94

  medieval, building materials for, 5

  Rumor, and cholera outbreak, 83

  Rural areas, 232–33

  St. Bartholomew’s Hospital, 154–55

  St. James’ Parish, and cholera outbreak

  Board of Governors, 159–60, 167–68

  Vestry Committee, 172, 179, 181–82, 200–201

  St. James Workhouse, 28, 82, 142, 153, 228

  St. Luke’s Church (Berwick Street), 25, 26–27, 227

  Sanitary conditions, 169–70

  and cholera, 51–52, 54

  Sanitation, Chadwick and, 118

  Scavenger classes

  in developing countries, 216

  in V
ictorian-era London, 1–5, 8–13

  Scientific establishment, and waterborne theory, 204

  Scientific method, Victorian-era medicine and, 97–98

  Sedgwick’s Principles of Sanitary Science and Public Health, 194, 200

  Sewer-hunters, 2

  miasma theory and, 125

  Sewer system, London, 105, 117, 119, 207–10

  construction of, 82

  investigation of, 191

  Broad Street, 199

  Shadow Cities (Neuwirth), 216–17

  Shantytown developments, 216

  Shelley, Percy, 18

  Slingshot water purifier, 217

  Small intestine, cholera and, 37–38, 146, 148,

  151–52, 246

  Smell

  as disease, 114, 121, 206

  Snow and, 146

  sense of, 128–31

  in Victorian-era London, 8, 15, 27

  Smith, Angus, 124

  Snow, John, 56, 58–62, 86, 97, 131, 148–49, 225, 226, 246–47

  and anesthetics, 63–68, 276–77n

  attacks on, 204–5

  and Broad Street outbreak, 109, 135–41, 153–56, 168–69, 201–2, 275n

  cause of epidemic, 159–60

  grand experiment, 107–9

  map of, 193–97, 198–201

  sociological evidence, 147–48

  and cholera, 68–77, 79, 98–100, 146–47, 176, 276n

  consilient thinking, 67–68

  death of, 206

  and Epidemiological Society, 193

  Farr and, 209, 211–12

  information resources, 259–60

  The Lancet and, 269n

  and miasma theory, 125, 144–48, 204, 275–76n

  reasoning style, 270n

  scientific studies, 268–69n, 269–70n

  and water companies, 105–6

  waterborne theory, 173

  opponents of, 167–68

  Whitehead and, 181, 202–3, 227

  Social prejudice, 149–50

  and miasma theory, 132–34

  Socioeconomic element in cholera outbreak, 78–79

  Sociologist, Snow as, 147–48, 149

  Soho (London district), xii–xiii, 16–20, 190, 227–28, 240

  cholera epidemic, 57–58, 154

  newspapers and, 83

  in Victorian era, 20–21

  See also Broad Street (Soho); Golden Square (Soho); London; specific sites

  Soho Field, 15–16

  Soho Square, 25

  Soil fertility, waste recycling and, 5

  South America, cholera outbreaks, 215

  South London Water Works, 73

  Southwark and Vauxhall (S&V) water company, 105–8

  Sproat, William, 34, 35

  Squatter cities, 216–17

  Standage, Tom, 46

  Statistics of public health, Farr and, 100–101, 272n

  Street-level knowledge, Snow’s map and, 197–98

  Subcultures, in cities, 221

  Suburbs, 221

  Suicide bombers, 251

  Superstition, 163, 255

  Surgeons, in nineteenth-century London, 60

  Surgery, in Victorian era, 62–63, 269n

  Surrey building (Horsleydown), cholera outbreak, 72–73

  Sutherland, John, 204

  Sydenham, Thomas, 132

  Tanning of leather, 4

  Tea, 95, 104

  Technology

  of density, 239–40

  and urbanization, 236

  Telecommuting, 222, 236

  Terrorism

  biological, 251–52

  9/11 attack, 239

  population density and, 240

  Thames River, 73, 119–21

  pollution of, 205–6, 207

  sewer system and, 214

  Theories, incorrect, support of, 126

  “Theses on the Philosophy of History” (Benjamin), xi, 14

  Third World, population control, 234

  Threats, intolerable, 240–42

  311 service, New York City, 222–24, 225

  Times, The (London). See London Times

  Toilets and water closets, 11–12

  Toshers, 1–2

  Towns, 221

  medieval, waste recycling in, 5

  Transgenic shifts, 42–43, 245–47, 250

  Tropical rain forests, 6

  Truscott’s Court (Horsleydown), 72–73

  Tufte, Edward

  The Visual Display of Quantitative Information, 260

  Visual Explanations, 194–95, 260

  Twin Towers, population density, 240

  Underclass, in Victorian-era London, 1–5

  United Nations, Global Report on Human Settlements, 232

  University College Hospital (London), 154

  Unsanitary conditions, deaths from, 217

  Urban density. See Population density

  Urban life, 84–85, 198, 203, 221–24, 231–34

  in developing world, 218

  flow of ideas, 225–26

  See also Cities; Inner-city air, as disease source; Inner-city life, in Victorian era; Towns

  Urban mapping systems, 280–81n

  Urbanism, Broad Street cholera outbreak and, 203

  Urbanization, 232

  benefits of, 233–39

  Industrial Revolution and, 271n

  pandemics and, 248

  threats of, 240–54

  Vaccines, production of, 249

  Vegetarian, Snow as, 59

  Vestry Committee. See St. James’ Parish, and cholera outbreak

  Vibrio cholerae (cholera bacterium), 36–37, 40–44, 96, 99, 131, 213, 230, 246

  battle against, 162–63

  in Broad Street well, 151–53

  “El Tor” strain, 215

  transmission route, 180–81, 188

  Victoria, Queen of England, 15

  childbirth, 66–67

  Victorian novels, and children, 84

  Viral phages (cholera), 152

  Viruses, 35, 250–51

  evolution of, 42–44

  genetic swaps, 245–47

  Visual Display of Quantitative Information, The (Tufte), 260

  Visual Explanations (Tufte), 194–95, 260

  Voronoi diagrams, 195

  Wages of night-soil men, 9–10

  Wagner, Richard, 18

  Waldor, Matthew K., 246

  Warfare, asymmetric. See Asymmetric warfare

  Warren, John Collins, 269n

  Waste disposal

  London, 9, 207–10

  in Victorian era, 115–17, 264n

  recycling, 5–8, 115–16, 217–18, 273–74n

  Waste management, 3–4, 214, 218, 233, 260

  Water, 38–39

  clean, 217

  search for, 103

  contaminated, 40, 42, 43–44

  as cure for cholera, 45

  Water closets, 11–12

  Water purifiers, 217

  Water supply

  and air quality, 132

  London, 73, 105, 147–48

  Board of Health and, 134

  Broad Street, 30–31 sanitary, 214

  Waterborne theory of cholera spread, 69, 72–74, 98, 131–32, 146–48

  acceptance of, 198–99, 201, 211–12

  Board of Health and, 183, 186

  evidence for, 100, 165–66

  experiment, 106–9

  Farr and, 102

  official endorsement, 200

  supporters, 203–4

  Vestry Committee and, 182

  Whitehead and, 167, 171–72, 226, 278–79n

  Weather, and disease, theories, 132–33

  Weekly Returns of Birth and Deaths (Farr), 100–101, 102, 106, 127, 132, 150, 153, 166, 177, 191

  and “Great Stink,” 204

  and waterborne theory, 204

  Westminster Hospital, 154

  Westminster Medical Society, 61–62, 64

  Whewell, William, 67

  Whitehead, Henry
, 24, 25–26, 28–29, 82, 84, 86–87, 111, 127, 147, 154, 210, 211, 225, 226–27

  The Cholera in Berwick Street, 169–72

  and cholera outbreak, 77–79, 52–54, 168, 169–72

  investigation of, 172–83, 199–200, 201–2

  local knowledge, 198

  and Snow, 181, 202–3, 213

  and theories of cholera spread, 149

  waterborne theory, 166–68, 172, 226, 278–79n

  Wilson, E. O., 67

  Wordsworth, William, 90, 91

  Workhouses, in Victorian era, 265–66n

  World Trade Center, population density, 240

  World Wide Web, and information, 218–19

  Yahoo!, 219–20

  York (surveyor), 179–80, 199

  ILLUSTRATION CREDITS

  Page xviii: Courtesy Illustrated London News.

  Page 24: Courtesy General Research Division, The New York Public Library, Astor, Lenox, and Tilden Foundations.

  Page 56: Courtesy Ralph R. Frerichs, UCLA Department of Epidemiology, School of Public Health, www.ph.ucla.edu/epi/snow.html.

  Page 110: Courtesy National Museum of Photography, Film, & Television/Science & Society Picture Library.

  Page 138: Courtesy National Library of Medicine and Light, Inc.

  Page 190: Courtesy Ralph R. Frerichs, UCLA Department of Epidemiology, School of Public Health, www.ph.ucla.edu/epi/snow.html.

  Page: 230: © Lester V. Bergman/Corbis.

 

 

 


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