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Sickening Bodies: How Racism and Essentialism Feature in Aboriginal Women's Discourse about Health1

 

作者: Dundi Mitchell,  

 

期刊: The Australian Journal of Anthropology  (WILEY Available online 1996)
卷期: Volume 7, issue 1  

页码: 258-274

 

ISSN:1035-8811

 

年代: 1996

 

DOI:10.1111/j.1835-9310.1996.tb00331.x

 

出版商: Blackwell Publishing Ltd

 

数据来源: WILEY

 

摘要:

In the last decade there has been much interest in the concepts of ‘racism’ and ‘essentialism’ and the ways in which these notions have been appropriated by Aboriginal people to demarcate a specifically Aboriginal space (Cowlishaw 1986; Lattas 1993; Langton 1981; Morris 1988; Muecke 1992). Central to these concerns is the issue of black/white relations and the specificities of racial oppression. Following these concerns in this article I explore the nexus between the metaphorical dismemberment of self and the corporeal dismemberment of sickness which is reflected in the high mortality rates and disease patterns of Aboriginal people. I extend Fanon's concept that racism has the power to alienate ‘a man of colour’ from his own self‐image to argue that it more than metaphorically breaks the human body (Fanon 1991). I provide a window into a much neglected area of research: how notions of illness and social relatedness are constructed in particular socio‐historical circumstances. I explore the meanings of illness as expressed at the level of community and as a form of embodiment associated with unequal colonial relations. I focus on indigenous exegeses which articulate Aboriginal women's experience of illness and their sense of identity. I draw on the work of Leder (1990) to foreground a phenomenological view where selfhood is continually confronted by circumstances that make present the ‘body’ as a ‘sharp and searing presence threatening the self’. I also apply Sansom's (1982) model of illness and the significance of carers in an Aboriginal community to demonstrate a world‐view of personhood that is diffused with other persons and things rather than a world‐view that entails a highly individuated and bounded self. In this world‐view adequate healing requires a reconstitution of social relations and a re‐orderi

 

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