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Medicine and Colonial Identity

Editor : Mary P. Sutphen, Bridie Andrews

Book Series : Routledge Studies in the Social History of Medicine

Master eBook ISBN10 : 0-203-52231-1

Master eBook ISBN13 : 978-0-203-52231-8

No of illustrations : 2 graphs

No of pages :160

Originally Published : 29 May 2003

No of Copies : 5

Status : Available [You may read this title]

Individuals or groups define their identities in particular ways, choosing from a long list of social variables: nationality, class, race, gender, age, sexuality, occupation or marital status, all of which may change either by choice or fiat. Over the last century, the issue of identity has become increasingly important and yet it remains a problematic category of historical analysis.
The historical record is full of diplomats and peasants discussing medicine and health concerns and topics which are significant to the study of medicine - professionalization, therapeutic choice, medical education and medical practice - topics which allow us to juxtapose a number of different strands of identity. This volume shows how the study of medicine can provide new insights into colonial identity and serve as a means to accommodate multiple perspectives on identity within a single narrative. An international range of contributors explore a variety of issues including the perceived self-identity of colonizers, the adoption of western and traditional medicine as complementary aspects of a new modern and nationalist identity, the creation of a modern identity of women in the colonies, the expression of a healer's identity by physicians of traditional medicine.
Medicine and Colonial Identity will be of essential interest to those studying the history of medicine and will also be of value to social historians.

Medicine and Colonial Identity

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Table of contents : 1. Bridie Andrews and Mary P. Sutphen Introduction
2. Maneesha Lal 'The Ignorance of Women is the House of Illness': Gender, Nationalism and Health Reform in Colonial North India
3. David Gordon A Sword of Empire? Medicine and Colonialism at Kingwilliamstown, Xhosaland, 1856-1891
4. Hilary Marland Midwives, Missions and Reform: Colonizing Dutch Childbirth Services at Home and Abroad c.1900
5. Philippa Mein Smith New Zealand Milk for 'Building Britons'
6. Suzanne Parry Tropical Medicine and Colonial Identity in Northern Australia
7. Roy MacLeod Colonial Doctors and National Myths: On Telling Lives in Australian Medical Biography


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