Welcome to our book review site go-pdf.online!

You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.

Sign up

A Nervous State
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 223

A Nervous State

In A Nervous State, Nancy Rose Hunt considers the afterlives of violence and harm in King Leopold’s Congo Free State. Discarding catastrophe as narrative form, she instead brings alive a history of colonial nervousness. This mood suffused medical investigations, security operations, and vernacular healing movements. With a heuristic of two colonial states—one "nervous," one biopolitical—the analysis alternates between medical research into birthrates, gonorrhea, and childlessness and the securitization of subaltern "therapeutic insurgencies." By the time of Belgian Congo’s famed postwar developmentalist schemes, a shining infertility clinic stood near a bleak penal colony, both sited...

A Colonial Lexicon
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 500

A Colonial Lexicon

A Colonial Lexicon is the first historical investigation of how childbirth became medicalized in Africa. Rejecting the “colonial encounter” paradigm pervasive in current studies, Nancy Rose Hunt elegantly weaves together stories about autopsies and bicycles, obstetric surgery and male initiation, to reveal how concerns about strange new objects and procedures fashioned the hybrid social world of colonialism and its aftermath in Mobutu’s Zaire. Relying on archival research in England and Belgium, as well as fieldwork in the Congo, Hunt reconstructs an ethnographic history of a remote British Baptist mission struggling to survive under the successive regimes of King Leopold II’s Congo ...

Suturing New Medical Histories of Africa
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 46

Suturing New Medical Histories of Africa

'Suturing' suggests closing a wound, making an incision, editing a film, or stitching together parts, locations, and points of view. The word is a helpful one for today's historians of disease, suffering, and medical practice in Africa. Whether focusing on a hospital or shrine, on malaria, trauma, witchcraft, or nursing, historians are grappling in new ways with the problems of joining locations and viewpoints, of tethering pasts with the present. New challenges arise when thinking about Africa's place in today's world of global health and biosecurity, war zones and heritage monies, emerging medical markets and self-treatment devices. Suturing points to new kinds of creativity with sources, evidence, and interactivity. As new digital capacities transform how history is engaged and produced, the word suturing helps to draw attention to the question of audiences and publics for African medical histories in the 21st century, as demonstrated in this book. (Series: Carl Schlettwein Lectures - Vol. 7)

Gendered Colonialisms in African History
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 152

Gendered Colonialisms in African History

Focusing on African and European women and men, five articles explore generational conflict, connections between representation and violence, the incorporation of gendered power into state formation, memory and forgetting, and consumption and commodity cultures.

The Oxford Handbook of Modern African History
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 559

The Oxford Handbook of Modern African History

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 2013-10
  • -
  • Publisher: Unknown

Provides the latest insights into, and interpretations of, the history of Africa

Tensions of Empire
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 488

Tensions of Empire

"Carrying the inquiry into zones previous itineraries have typically avoided—the creation of races, sexual relations, invention of tradition, and regional rulers' strategies for dealing with the conquerors—the book brings out features of European expansion and contraction we have not seen well before."—Charles Tilly, The New School for Social Research "What is important about this book is its commitment to shaping theory through the careful interpretation of grounded, empirically-based historical and ethnographic studies. . . . By far the best collection I have seen on the subject."—Sherry B. Ortner, Columbia University

Imperial Debris
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 378

Imperial Debris

Imperial Debris redirects critical focus from ruins as evidence of the past to "ruination" as the processes through which imperial power occupies the present. Ann Laura Stoler's introduction is a manifesto, a compelling call for postcolonial studies to expand its analytical scope to address the toxic but less perceptible corrosions and violent accruals of colonial aftermaths, as well as their durable traces on the material environment and people's bodies and minds. In their provocative, tightly focused responses to Stoler, the contributors explore subjects as seemingly diverse as villages submerged during the building of a massive dam in southern India, Palestinian children taught to envisio...

The Colonial Disease
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 356

The Colonial Disease

A case-study in the history of sleeping sickness, relating it to the western 'civilising mission'.

Domesticity and Colonialism in Belgian Africa : Usumbura's Foyer Social, 1946-1960
  • Language: en

Domesticity and Colonialism in Belgian Africa : Usumbura's Foyer Social, 1946-1960

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: Unknown
  • -
  • Publisher: Unknown

None

Health in a Fragile State
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 283

Health in a Fragile State

None