引言:加拿大印第安寄宿学校对健康和身体的思考

Pub Date : 2017-07-01 DOI:10.3828/bjcs.2017.8
Evan J. Habkirk, Janice Forsyth
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引用次数: 1

摘要

不久前,这本杂志的总体主题源于许多撰稿人之间关于“健康”一词的对话,以及研究人员将其应用于我们理解加拿大印度寄宿学校系统的不同方式。我们越是讨论这个词是如何应用的,并仔细考虑这些应用可能带来的影响,我们就越认识到探索这个词的边界的重要性,超越它在住院和医疗方面的传统用法。正如这一特刊所表明的那样,在加拿大的印度寄宿学校中使用健康,与体育规划、食物和营养不良、语言和代际创伤、课外规划、军事准备和文化认同直接相关。尽管这一收集代表了加拿大研究人员正在进行的工作的一小部分样本,但我们希望它能为研究和理解寄宿学校系统中与健康相关的问题开辟可能性。本期特刊的所有撰稿人也都以某种方式参与了各自领域的政治活动。因此,我们密切关注真相与和解委员会的最后报告,该委员会是一个联邦授权机构,负责从学生的角度收集和记录印度寄宿学校系统的历史。尽管为期六年的调查于2015年结束,但随着土著人和加拿大人努力解决与健康相关的复杂问题,对该系统健康方面的研究仍在继续。本集中的所有文章在一定程度上都提到了真相与和解委员会的工作。Ian Mosby和Tracey Galloway的文章“持久的条件是饥饿”:评估加拿大寄宿学校营养不良和饥饿对生物和健康的长期影响”,探讨了历史上营养不良对土著人民和土著社区的影响。作者引用了世界各地的营养不良研究,认为加拿大土著人面临的许多健康问题可以追溯到寄宿学校。这是一项开创性的研究,因为它将食物匮乏和缺乏健康食品与生物和心理发展联系起来,从而挑战了旨在解决土著人肥胖预防和糖尿病等健康相关问题的典型干预措施。他们对证据的使用也突显了研究人员需要从历史和世界其他地区找到类似的例子,以更好地理解加拿大印度寄宿学校系统的影响。历史学家兼档案管理员Krista McCracken在《透视档案照片:印度寄宿学校的健康图像》一书中探讨了安大略省西班牙语的西班牙印第安寄宿学校体育和娱乐的照片证据。正如前学生兼作家巴兹尔·约翰斯顿在其著作《印度学校日》中所指出的那样,西班牙语是拥有非常活跃的体育项目的学校之一。她深入研究了在安大略省索尔特圣玛丽的阿尔戈马大学Shingwauk中心举行的Morice Fonds神父活动,用西班牙语查看体育和娱乐的照片。她的论文重点关注该机构对体育和娱乐的表述,并调查了这些表述对殖民主义和健康的看法,以及存档的实践及其在通过探索体育和娱乐照片帮助土著人找回过去方面的作用。Lorena Sekwan Fontaine的文章《语言灭绝的补救措施:加拿大的寄宿学校和同化》讨论了寄宿学校制度对土著语言丧失的影响和政府缺乏承认…
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Introduction: Reflections on health and the body at Canadian Indian residential schools
The overall theme of this journal arose some time ago from conversations between many of the contributors about the term 'health' and the different ways researchers have applied it to our understanding of the Indian residential school system in Canada. The more we discussed how the term had been applied, and mulled over the possible implications of those applications, the more we recognised the importance of exploring the boundaries of the term, going beyond its traditional usage referring to hospitalisation and medical treatment. As this special issue demonstrates, health, when used in the context of Canada's Indian residential schools, is linked directly to physical education programming, food and malnutrition, language and intergenerational trauma, extra-curricular programming, military preparedness, and cultural identity. Although this collection represents a small sample of the work being carried out by researchers in Canada, we hope it opens up the possibilities for research and understanding regarding healthrelated matters stemming from the residential school system.All of the contributors to this special issue are also politically engaged in one way or another in their various fields. As such, we paid close attention to the final reports of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission - a federally mandated body that was responsible for collecting and documenting the history of the Indian residential school system from the perspective of the students. Although the six-year investigation ended in 2015, research into the health aspects of the system continues as Indigenous people and Canadians wrestle with complex matters tied to health. All of the articles in this collection refer to some extent to the work of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission.Ian Mosby and Tracey Galloway's article, '"The abiding condition was hunger": assessing the long-term biological and health effects of malnutrition and hunger in Canada's residential schools', explores the present-day effects of historical malnutrition on Indigenous people and Indigenous communities. Citing malnutrition studies from around the world, the authors argue that many of the health problems that Indigenous people in Canada face can be traced to the residential schools. It is a groundbreaking study in that it links food deprivation, and the lack of access to healthy foods, to biological and psychological development, thus challenging typical interventions that aim to address health-related issues, such as obesity prevention and diabetes, among Indigenous people. Their use of evidence also highlights the need for researchers to find parallel examples from history and other parts of the world to understand the implications of the Indian residential school system in Canada better.In 'Archival photographs in perspective: Indian residential school images of health', historian and archivist Krista McCracken explores the photographic evidence of sports and recreation at Spanish Indian Residential School in Spanish, Ontario. Spanish was one of the schools that had a very active sports program, as noted by former student and author Basil Johnston in his book, Indian School Days. She delves into the Father Morice Fonds, held at the Shingwauk Centre at Algoma University in Sault Ste Marie, Ontario, to examine photos of sport and recreation at Spanish. Her paper focuses on representations of sport and recreation at that institution and investigates what those representations say about colonialism and health, as well as the practice of archiving and its role in helping Indigenous people reclaim their past through explorations of sport and recreation photographs.Lorena Sekwan Fontaine's article, 'Redress for linguicide: residential schools and assimilation in Canada', discusses the effects and lack of governmental recognition of the loss of Indigenous languages due to the residential school system. …
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