当黑人的生命真正重要:托妮·莫里森小说中通过非洲散居的治疗仪式颠覆医疗种族主义

IF 0.3 3区 文学 0 LITERATURE, AMERICAN
MELUS Pub Date : 2022-01-25 DOI:10.1093/melus/mlac001
M. Cutter
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引用次数: 0

摘要

摘要:托妮·莫里森(Toni Morrison)的大部分作品都详细描述了非洲裔美国人在种族主义社会中生存的不可预测性,特别关注男权暴力和针对女性身体的医疗隔离。然而,莫里森也在尼日利亚、巴西和埃及之间的黑人元文化框架中勾勒出了另一种治疗模式。随着我们从COVID-19危机中走出来,研究表明,培训更多的非洲裔美国医生、护士和医师助理可能会减少医疗种族主义。莫里森的小说着眼于一个更基本的层面,在这个层面上,对非裔美国人身体的爱是治愈的核心。因此,本文讨论了医疗种族主义,并将莫里森的经验教训应用于她的作品中尖锐预示的COVID-19时刻。它聚焦于三位治疗师,他们忽略了医疗机构,体现了一种元文化的治疗伦理:贝比·萨格斯(《宠儿》[1987]),康索拉塔·索萨(《天堂》[1997])和埃塞尔·福德汉姆(《家园》[2012])。莫里森将非洲侨民的框架与具体的新知识融合在一起,使个人能够在白人主导的医学世界中获得洞察力和能动性,而白人仍然拒绝认可黑人的身体和精神真的很重要。因此,对这些治疗师的做法的研究,通过提出非洲裔美国人在遇到和导航传统医疗体系时可以保持“清醒”和自主的方式,从而揭示了COVID-19时刻。即使在今天,传统医疗体系也将非洲裔美国人的身体视为医学实验的素材,对疾病免疫,不需要道德和人道的医疗护理。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
When Black Lives Really Do Matter: Subverting Medical Racism through African-Diasporic Healing Rituals in Toni Morrison’s Fiction
Abstract:Toni Morrison spent much of her career detailing the unpredictability of African American existence within a racist society, with a special focus on patriarchal violence and medical apartheid against women’s bodies. Yet Morrison also limns out alternative modes of healing within a Black metacultural framework that moves between Nigeria, Brazil, and Egypt. As we move forward from the COVID-19 crisis, research has suggested that training more African American doctors, nurses, and physician assistants might curtail medical racism. Morrison’s fiction looks to a more basic level in which love of the bodies of African American people is at the center of healing. This article therefore discusses medical racism and applies Morrison’s lessons to the COVID-19 moment that her writing trenchantly foreshadows. It focuses on three healers who elide the medical establishment to embody a metacultural ethics of healing: Baby Suggs (in Beloved [1987]), Consolata Sosa (in Paradise [1997]), and Ethel Fordham (in Home [2012]). Morrison fuses an African-diasporic framework with embodied new knowledge that allows individuals to gain insight and agency in a white-dominant medical world that still refuses to endorse the idea that Black people’s bodies and psyches really do matter. An examination of these healers’ practices therefore sheds light on the COVID-19 moment by suggesting ways that African American people can stay “woke” and have agency when encountering and navigating traditional health care systems, which even today view the bodies of African Americans as fodder for medical experiments, immune to disease, and not in need of ethical and humane medical care.
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来源期刊
MELUS
MELUS LITERATURE, AMERICAN-
CiteScore
0.40
自引率
50.00%
发文量
59
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