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The Vaccine and Its Simulacra: Agnotology, Ontology and Biopolitics in France, 1800–1865
Author(s) -
JeanBaptiste Fressoz
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
administory
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2519-1187
DOI - 10.2478/adhi-2018-0010
Subject(s) - smallpox vaccine , smallpox , ontology , biopower , vaccination , virology , medicine , political science , law , epistemology , politics , biology , philosophy , biochemistry , gene , vaccinia , recombinant dna
The advent of smallpox vaccine in France in 1800 inaugurates a new relationship between administration, public health and the definition of medical facts. As Napoleon himself refused to establish compulsory vaccination, a Comité de vaccine was established so as to impose the idea of a riskless vaccine protecting forever from smallpox. This article studies how human experimentation, clinical experience, medical imagery and statistics maintained the idea of a perfect vaccine for six decades, despite the multiplication of cases of post-vaccination smallpox and vaccine contaminations.

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