Bio-Imperialism focuses on an understudied dimension of the war on terror: the fight against bioterrorism. This component of the war enlisted the biosciences and public health fields to build up the U.S. biodefense industry and U.S. global disease control. The book argues that U.S. imperial ambitions drove these shifts in focus, aided by gendered and racialized discourses on terrorism, disease, and science. These narratives helped rationalize American research expansion into dangerous germs and bioweapons in the name of biodefense and bolstered the U.S. rationale for increased interference in the disease control decisions of Global South nations. Bio-Imperialism is a sobering look at how the war on terror impacted the world in ways that we are only just starting to grapple with.
Table of Contents
Contents
List of Illustrations
Introduction: Bio-imperialism and the Entanglement of Bioscience, Public Health, and National Security
1. The Making of the Technoscientific Other: Tales of Terrorism, Development, and Third World Morality
2. From Practicing Safe Science to Keeping Science Out of âDangerous Handsâ: The Resurgence of  U.S. âBiodefenseâ
3. Co-opting Caregiving: Softening Militarism, Feminizing the Nation Â
4. Preparedness Migrates: Pandemics, Germ Extraction, and âGlobal Health Securityâ
Epilogue: Repurposing Science and Public Health
Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index
About the Author
Gwen Shuni DâArcangelis is an associate professor of gender studies at Skidmore College in Saratoga Springs, New York.
What People Are Saying
"In this astute and timely study, DâArcangelis tracks the rise of a racialized and gendered 'bioterror imaginary' in the U.S. through science, politics, journalism, social media, and popular culture that facilitated the conversion of warnings of bioterror into a strategy for U.S. imperialism. Bio-Imperialism offers an urgent analysis of how the US produces the threats to the health of a population it ostensibly seeks to address." Priscilla Wald, author of Contagious: Cultures, Carriers, and the Outbreak Narrative
"DâArcangelis provides a rich, timely, must-read account of the United Statesâ 'bioterror imaginary' and its role in the construction of national fragility. Bio-Imperialism recounts tales of terrorism, technoscience, caregiving, and preparedness that are entangled in a nationalism conflating public health and national security. In so doing, the book provides impressive insight into the racialized and gendered dynamics underlying the United Statesâ representation and repurposing of science and health, and the dangers therein." Laura Sjoberg, co-author of International Relations' Last Synthesis?
"A concise and powerful book on the injustices and asymmetries of global health security....The book makes two important contributions to the critique of global health. As regards method, it concerns itself with the strategic use of language, through a close reading of policy, legislative, medical and scientific sources. This analytical work is given an ethical edge through the technique of ârhetorical re-descriptionâ or âparadiastole.â" New Genetics and Society