Health, medicine and migration : the formation of indentured labour c.1834-1920 / Madhwi.
Language: English Publication details: Delhi : Primus Books, 2020.Description: xii, 383 p. : ill., maps ; 24 cmISBN:- 9789390232680
- Indentured servants -- Mauritius
- Foreign workers, East Indian -- Health and hygiene -- Mauritius
- Indentured servants -- South Africa -- KwaZulu-Natal
- Foreign workers, East Indian -- Health and hygiene -- South Africa -- KwaZulu-Natal
- Plantation workers -- Mauritius
- Plantation workers -- South Africa -- KwaZulu-Natal
- Indentured servants
- Plantation workers
- Mauritius
- South Africa -- KwaZulu-Natal
- 331.542096982 R0
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() |
Prime Ministers Museum and Library | 331.542096982 R0 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 189111 |
Browsing Prime Ministers Museum and Library shelves Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
![]() |
No cover image available | No cover image available |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
||
331.510968 M2/M2;1 Akin to slavery prison labour in South Africa / | 331.54209684 M0 Documents of Indentures labour : | 331.54209684 M0 Documents of Indentures labour : | 331.542096982 R0 Health, medicine and migration : | 331.5440820954 R0 Migration, trafficking and gender construction : | 331.544095 Q7 Rural labour mobility in times of structural transformation : | 331.5440954 R3 Media, migrants and the pandemic in India : |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Exploring the links between medicine and migration, health, medicine and migration: The formation of Indentured Labour, c. 1834-1920 examines the ways in which medical knowledge, practice, and policies circulated between Colonial India, the source of indentured labourers, and the colonies to which they were transported as coolies. It argues that Western Science, which itself was a product of modernity and the Enlightenment, acted as an instrument of social and cultural control over the migrants, and worked on the basis of racial categorizations of inferiority and superiority. The understanding of trophical diseases were shaped by a very biased Western perception of the hotter regions of the Southern Hemisphere. The indentured body was seen as the reservoir of diseases, which it had acquired from its unhealthy surroundings in India, and which were later carried overseas by it. The world of medical Science and technology helped in the legitmatization and regularization of their body in the plantations.
Engaging with the various spaces of the coolie world, depot, voyages, quarantine, and plantations, through a medical lens, this volume visualizes the body of labouring masses and the basic qualities of a 'healthy body' defined on these spaces. The shifting role of western medicine from 'making labour to disabling labour', from 'masculine to feminine', and from 'valid to invalid' is also explored.
Based on primary sources, this book will interest scholars, researchers and students of modern Indian history and social history of medicine, as well as the interested reader of migration history.
There are no comments on this title.