Slavery's Medicine
Claire E. Gherini
Geisteswissenschaften, Kunst, Musik / Geschichte
Beschreibung
Healthcare and hierarchy in Caribbean plantation slavery
From their inception, British Caribbean sugar plantations generated wealth on the basis of nightmarish systems of labor exploitation, where illness was a constant of enslaved life. Then, in the second half of the eighteenth century, plantation owners tried to “improve” plantation slavery, targeting medicine and healing. But rather than improve rates of illness, they sought instead to make the work of medicine and care more economically predictable and efficient and to hurry the sick back to work. Healthcare became an arena for contests for power, as people struggled with one another over the terms of their work and how they recovered from illness.
Slavery's Medicine uses a rich and substantial archival base to document the experiences of the sick, managers, doctors, absentee plantation owners, enslaved healers, and medical advice authors in this new, modern system of body management. Modern medicine ultimately sustained hierarchies among enslaved people and middling whites. Yet modern medicine also encouraged acts of resistance. It was, therefore, the creation of proprietors as well as enslaved men and women themselves.
Kundenbewertungen
plantation hospitals, medicine and capitalism, traditional remedies, pharmaceuticals, urban hospitals, labor exploitation, plantation overseers, amelioration movement, herbalists, medical racism, Black healers, colonial Jamaica, slavery’s legacies