Mary Preston Sutphen
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Rumoured power
Hong Kong, 1894 and Cape Town, 1901
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This chapter examines what was at stake in rejecting inoculation. In Hong Kong, the British blamed a small minority of influential Chinese, those who were English-speaking and Western-educated, for many of the rumours. In Cape Town, rumours about inoculation against plague revealed deep rifts within the English-speaking community over the value of outside advisers and ideas brought by outsiders. By the time plague broke out in Hong Kong, the colony was one of the world's largest entrepots. As the number of reported cases increased, the number of rumours mentioned in the Hong Kong Daily Press and in accounts the Governor sent to the Colonial Office also increased. Rumours in Hong Kong during the plague epidemic revealed some of the tensions in the British and Chinese communities over colonial rule.

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