Title of article :
Circulating smallpox knowledge: Guatemalan doctors, Maya Indians and designing Spain’s smallpox vaccination expedition, 1780–1803
Abstract :
Drawing on the rich but mostly overlooked history of Guatemala’s anti-smallpox
campaigns in the 1780s and 1790s, this paper interweaves an analysis of the contribution of
colonial medical knowledges and practical experiences with the construction and implementation
of imperial science. The history of the anti-smallpox campaigns is traced from the
introduction of inoculation in Guatemala in 1780 to the eve of the Spanish Crown-sponsored
Royal Maritime Vaccination Expedition in 1803. The paper first analyses the development of
what Guatemalan medical physician José Flores called his ‘local method’ of inoculation,
tailored to material and cultural conditions of highland Maya communities, and based on his
more than twenty years of experience in anti-smallpox campaigns among multiethnic
populations in Guatemala. Then the paper probes the accompanying transformations in
discourses about health through the anti-smallpox campaigns as they became explicitly linked
to new discourses of moral responsibility towards indigenous peoples. With the launch of the
Spanish Vaccination Expedition in 1803, anti-smallpox efforts bridged the New World, Europe
and Asia, and circulated on a global scale via the enactment of imperial Spanish health policy
informed, in no small part, by New World and specifically colonial Guatemalan experiences
with inoculation in multiethnic cities and highland Maya towns.