移民国家的殖民医学:土著健康史的比较

IF 0.4 Q3 HISTORY & PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE
W. Anderson
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引用次数: 47

摘要

土著居民健康的历史与地理和殖民问题有着不可分割的联系。“土著”通常意味着一个地方,通常被认为是边缘的、孤立的或正在发展的——就像其他地方一样更确切地说,土著地位意味着——或者更确切地说,是基于——一段殖民和剥夺的历史,随之而来的是对侵略者和定居者的抵抗和适应。这个词标志着原始居民和殖民者之间的对比。试图确定某种特殊的土著本质或类型的努力最终是徒劳的,因为这种地位是在定居者殖民主义下的政治从属地位因此,土著居民健康的历史要求对殖民主义和早期白人民族国家的影响保持敏感。此外,它需要对接触、“文明”和“发展”的黑暗面有批判性的认识,以及对同化、整合和自决相关过程的多重含义的欣赏自从与欧洲侵略者第一次接触以来,在同一殖民地或国家,土著居民总体上比非土著居民病得更重,死得更早这些健康差异在北美和新西兰已经大大减少,但在澳大利亚仍然很严重。5在20世纪后期,一些历史学家试图从生物学的角度解释最初的殖民对土著社会的影响。因此,传染病扩大了“死亡队伍”,因为土著人民遭受了“处女地”流行病,这是“生态帝国主义”的自然结果。正如这些历史学家中的大多数后来承认的那样,这种生物学分析往往低估了战争、剥夺财产和士气低落对健康和社会组织的非自然影响当代健康差异的生物学解释在很大程度上已经过时了
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Colonial Medicine of Settler States: Comparing Histories of Indigenous Health
The history of Indigenous health connects inextricably with matters of geography and colonisation. 'Indigenous' usually connotes a place, often figured as marginal or isolated or developmental - as somewhere else.1 More pertinently, Indigenous status implies - or rather, is predicated upon - a history of colonisation and dispossession, with consequent resistance and adaptation to invaders and settlers. The term marks the contrast between original inhabitants and colonisers. The effort to identify some special Indigenous essence or type ultimately is futile since the status emerges out of political subordination under settler colonialism.2 The history of Indigenous health thus demands sensitivity to the impact of both colonialism and the incipient white nation-state. Moreover, it requires a critical awareness of the dark sides of contact, 'civilisation,' and 'development,' as well as an appreciation of the multiple implications of the related processes of assimilation, integration, and self-determination.3 Since first contact with European invaders, Indigenous people on the whole have been sicker and died younger than non-Indigenous inhabitants of the same colony or state.4 These health disparities have lessened significantly in North America and New Zealand, but remain severe across Australia.5 During the late-twentieth century, some historians attempted to explain the initial colonial impact on Indigenous societies in biological terms. Thus infectious diseases swelled the 'ranks of death,' as Indigenous people suffered 'virgin-soil' epidemics, the natural result of 'ecological imperialism.'6 As most of these historians later conceded, such biological analysis tended to discount the unnatural effects of warfare, dispossession, and demoralisation on health and social organisation.7 Biological explanations of contemporary health disparities are largely out of fashion - the
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