Parution – The Ten-Thousand Year Fever Rethinking Human and Wild Primate Malarias

Parution – The Ten-Thousand Year Fever Rethinking Human and Wild Primate Malarias

 

Loretta Cormier, The Ten-Thousand Year Fever Rethinking Human and Wild Primate Malarias, Left Coast Press, Inc., 2011, 224 p.

Malaria is one of the oldest recorded diseases in human history, and its 10,000-year relationship to primates can teach us why it will be one of the most serious threats to humanity in the 21st century. In this pathbreaking book Loretta Cormier integrates a wide range of data from molecular biology, ethnoprimatology, epidemiology, ecology, anthropology, and other fields to reveal the intimate relationships between culture and environment that shape the trajectory of a parasite. She argues against the entrenched distinction between human and non-human malarias, using ethnoprimatology to develop a new understanding of cross-species exchange. She also shows how current human-environment interactions, including deforestation and development, create the potential for new forms of malaria to threaten human populations. This book is a model of interdisciplinary integration that will be essential reading in fields from anthropology and biology to public health.

Excerpt available online: http://www.lcoastpress.com/book.php?id=330

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