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Healing Traditions Karen E. Flint

Healing Traditions By Karen E. Flint

Healing Traditions by Karen E. Flint


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Summary

Healing Traditions offers a historical perspective to the interactions between South Africas traditional healers and biomedical practitioners. It provides an understanding that is vital for the development of medical strategies to effectively deal with South Africas healthcare challenges.

Healing Traditions Summary

Healing Traditions: African Medicine, Cultural Exchange, and Competition in South Africa, 18201948 by Karen E. Flint

In August 2004, South Africa officially sought to legally recognize the practice of traditional healers. Largely in response to the HIV/AIDS pandemic, and limited both by the number of practitioners and by patients access to treatment, biomedical practitioners looked toward the countrys traditional healers as important agents in the development of medical education and treatment. This collaboration has not been easy. The two medical cultures embrace different ideas about the body and the origin of illness, but they do share a history of commercial and ideological competition and different relations to state power. Healing Traditions: African Medicine, Cultural Exchange, and Competition in South Africa, 18201948 provides a long-overdue historical perspective to these interactions and an understanding that is vital for the development of medical strategies to effectively deal with South Africas healthcare challenges.
Between 1820 and 1948 traditional healers in Natal, South Africa, transformed themselves from politically powerful men and women who challenged colonial rule and law into successful entrepreneurs who competed for turf and patients with white biomedical doctors and pharmacists. To understand what is traditional about traditional medicine, Flint argues that we must consider the cultural actors and processes not commonly associated with African therapeutics: white biomedical practitioners, Indian healers, and the implementing of white rule.
Carefully crafted, well written, and powerfully argued, Flints analysis of the ways that indigenous medical knowledge and therapeutic practices were forged, contested, and transformed over two centuries is highly illuminating, as is her demonstration that many traditional practices changed over time. Her discussion of African and Indian medical encounters opens up a whole new way of thinking about the social basis of health and healing in South Africa. This important book will be core reading for classes and future scholarship on health and healing in Africa.

Healing Traditions Reviews

(Flint) should be applauded for her thorough analysis of a very complex subject during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries when western biomedicine was asserting itself worldwide as the dominant profession. * Journal of Medicine and Allied Sciences *
Healing Traditions greatly illuminates the business of medicine within its colonial and postcolonial contexts. Flints work not only offers an excellent model for comparative study; it also suggests that the situation in South Africa is just one important part of a world historical process of biomedical market expansion. * Business History Review *
Flints work is of interest not only to historians of medicine, but also social-cultural historians working with topics as varied as witchcraft and professionalization. Taken as a whole, the work demonstrates that the syncretic nature of the current South African medical environment results from almost 200 years of dynamic cultural exchange and competition. * Canadian Journal of History *
Healing Traditions is a comprehensive work that substantially adds to our knowledge of how medicine and power have intertwined in South Africa over the past two hundred years. * Technology and Culture *
An extremely timely book that will have immediate impact on the heated current debates across several fields of study, forming part of a new and exciting debate emerging around new South African history. The book has great potential to have a measurable impact on the teaching of medicine and health and the various pathways to healing and health in our current HIV/AIDS pandemic.
lucid and detailed. a vivid picture of the polyculturalism underlying African traditional medicine, and of the economic, social, and political history of a complex medical marketplace. * American Historical Review *
A well-researched and argued book that contributes to the discussion over cultural imperialism by problematizing current ideas of biomedicines colonial hegemony. * CHOICE *

About Karen E. Flint

Karen E. Flint is an associate professor of history at the University of North Carolina, Charlotte.

Additional information

NPB9780821418499
9780821418499
0821418491
Healing Traditions: African Medicine, Cultural Exchange, and Competition in South Africa, 18201948 by Karen E. Flint
New
Hardback
Ohio University Press
2008-10-21
296
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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