Science Under Adversity

Science Under Adversity

Latin American Medical Researchers of the Early Twentieth Century

This masterful and captivating study redefines science as a modern, universal, and yet locally rooted endeavor under adversity. Drawing on rich archival material, Marcos Cueto dismantles the linear narratives of scientific modernization and uncovers the hidden dynamics of scientific practice, discourse, and paradigms in three Global South nations long obscured by dominant accounts of scientific development.
Claudia Agostoni, Instituto de Investigaciones Históricas, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México

Cueto shows that productive tensions between doctors and scientists in Argentina, Mexico, and Peru and their counterparts at US research centers and philanthropies shaped the life sciences in the region. Despite assumptions that countries in the Global South produced science of doubtful quality, and despite institutional and economic obstacles, Latin American physiologists took part in networks of scientific power that dictated distinctive styles of laboratory research and strategies to validate experimental medical science. But physiology lost its comprehensive appeal and fragmented into multiple disciplines following World War II. The Cold-War dictated new agendas of research and validation of academic science as an enterprise that restricted the negotiation of US influences. Cueto tells the story of a complex combination of local, transnational, and international factors where dissonance and negotiation, co-responsibility and individualism, competition and collaboration, all coexisted in the name of science.

232 Pages, 6 x 9 in.

December, 2026

isbn : 9780822949145

about the author

Marcos Cueto

Marcos Cueto is a researcher at the Instituto de Estudios Peruanos in Lima. He also is a professor of history of science and health at the Casa de Oswaldo Cruz in Rio de Janeiro. He is the author of two books and the coauthor of two more, including Medicine and Public Health in Latin America: A History, which won the George Rosen Award from the American Association for the History of Medicine.

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Marcos Cueto