The Impact of the 1833 Cholera Epidemic on Havana's Vulnerable Populations and Urban Landscape

Authors

  • Ninel Valderrama Negron University of Kansas
  • Riya Mohan Duke University

Abstract

This article examines the connection between the cholera epidemic, health codes, and the early nineteenth-century urban change of Havana. Cholera was supposed to be a sickness that targeted weak people of color. Moral deviance and physical contamination had previously been vaguely associated with concepts of racial and class inferiority, but following the 1833 cholera outbreak, the ideological links between the two became clear. Colonial authorities took advantage of the circumstances to carry out many of the urban changes that would drastically change Havana's appearance, such as renovating the most vulnerable areas, creating roads, and establishing aqueducts, public fountains, and gardens. In this study, we will examine the impact of the cholera epidemic on women of color, as well as the modification of their living environments in Havana in the decades after the 1833 epidemic. Viewing the epidemic from the inside allows us to understand the trends of structural racialization prevalent in Havana at the time as well as within our own society. The structural violence made evident by analyzing infrastructure makes analysis of past societies, through race, gender, and class, vital for the creation of policy.

Author Biographies

Ninel Valderrama Negron, University of Kansas

Spanish and Portuguese Department

Riya Mohan, Duke University

Duke-Margolis Health Policy Scholar

Published

2023-12-27

How to Cite

Valderrama Negron, N., & Mohan, R. (2023). The Impact of the 1833 Cholera Epidemic on Havana’s Vulnerable Populations and Urban Landscape. Periphērica: Journal of Social, Cultural, and Literary History, 2(2), 249–286. Retrieved from https://journals.oregondigital.org/peripherica/article/view/5826

Issue

Section

Dossier El Pabellón Colonial: Revisiting Cuba and the Philippines