
Contents
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Colonial Researchers at Work Colonial Researchers at Work
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Politics and the Social Politics and the Social
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The Critique of Colonial Medicine and Health Workers The Critique of Colonial Medicine and Health Workers
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Ethnographic History and Gender Moves Ethnographic History and Gender Moves
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The Psychiatric The Psychiatric
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Objects, Sorcery, and the Harming Register Objects, Sorcery, and the Harming Register
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A Time of Acronyms: Saps, Aids, and Sts A Time of Acronyms: Saps, Aids, and Sts
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Deeper Pasts and New Methods Deeper Pasts and New Methods
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Conclusion Conclusion
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Notes Notes
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Bibliography Bibliography
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20 Health and Healing
Get accessNancy Rose Hunt, Professor of History at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, regularly teaches a course called ‘Health and Illness in African Worlds’. She has published essays on breastfeeding, nursing, abortion, letter-writing, bicycles, and comics. A Colonial Lexicon: Of Birth Ritual, Medicalization, and Mobility in the Congo (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 1999) received the Herskovits Prize in 2000. A Nervous State: Violence, Remedies, and Reverie (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, forthcoming) analyses the securitization of therapeutic insurgency and the medicalization of infertility in a region of the Belgian Congo.
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Published:16 December 2013
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Abstract
The ‘Health and Healing’ field emerged in the late 1970s as a way to focus more on vernacular healing practice and the politics of health. The essay covers an earlier generation of colonial anthropological work; key concepts like public healing, the social costs of production, drums of affliction, ambivalence, translation, debility, care, and therapeutic citizenship; and major themes, including colonial medicine, health workers, reproductive health, the psychiatric, experimentality, global health, and conjoined healing and harming dynamics. It argues that the field produced a now vibrant and quite presentist genre, ethnographic history; that the new STS-influenced work on materialities, memory, and war is vital; but that this field in African history is also worthy of robust research producing a deeper past.
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