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A biography of infectious diseases: Hans Zinsser and his Rats, Lice and History
Zhang Tongyang
Published 2022-05-28
Cite as Chin J Med Hist, 2022, 52(3): 185-192. DOI: 10.3760/cma.j.cn112155-20211227-00154
Abstract
Hans Zinsser, a well-known bacteriologist and immunologist in the United States in the early 20th century, made great advancement in the research of pathogen of typhus and its vaccine, with the epidemic typhus renamed after him. His masterpiece, Rats, Lice and History, teased out the co-evolutionary process of infectious diseases and their related organisms, focusing on specific cases and the development history of typhus. In this sense, he revealed the tremendous impact of infectious diseases on human history. He examined microorganisms and humans equally rather than simply from a human point of view. He analysed the pathological features of infectious diseases and provided professional insights into historical events of infectious diseases, such as the origin of syphilis and the plague of Athens, based on sufficient citations and references. He also advocated interpreting the history of infectious diseases with a holistic insight of history. His book, Rats, Lice and History, has been reprinted many times after its first publication, driving the following scholars to put the history of infectious diseases into a grand background of human development, enhancing the comprehension of ecology and politics and promoting the development of research in the history of diseases including life sciences, history and other disciplines.
Key words:
Rats, Lice and History; Hans Zinsser; infectious diseases; typhus; global history of diseases
Contributor Information
Zhang Tongyang
University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100049, China
Institute for the History of Natural Sciences, CAS, Beijing 100190, China