Thesis ID: CBB001560648

Communicating Disease: Medical Knowledge and Literary Forms in Colonial British America (2009)

unapi

Wisecup, Kelly (Author)


University of Maryland, College Park
Bauer, Ralph


Publication Date: 2009
Edition Details: Advisor: Bauer, Ralph
Physical Details: 307 pp.
Language: English

This dissertation examines the literary repercussions of encounters between European, Native American, and African medical philosophies throughout the British American colonies. In particular, I examine the formation and transformation of colonial literary forms in an intercultural and a transatlantic context, by investigating the ways in which colonists incorporated Native and African knowledge to produce various literary forms. I employ anthropological and ethnohistorical studies to show that colonists displaced competing rhetorical practices by incorporating non-European knowledge and presenting firsthand descriptions of New World medicines and illnesses. Additionally, colonists adapted rhetorical strategies from England to subordinate Native and African knowledge as witchcraft and to distance themselves from colonial encounters. Early Americans' incorporation and subordination of non-European medical philosophies authorized colonial medical knowledge as empirical and rational and constructed conceptions of cultural differences between colonists, Native Americans, and Africans. My introduction examines medical encounters in the context of early modern medical philosophies and rhetorical practices. Chapter one examines how Thomas Hariot mixed Algonquian theories that disease originated in "invisible bullets" with Paracelsian medical philosophies, connecting seeing and knowing in his true report. Chapter two examines Pilgrim Edward Winslow's appropriation and subordination of shamans' medical practices to provide firsthand accounts of New World wonders in his providence tale. Chapter three examines the 1721 inoculation controversy in the context of Africans' testimony about inoculation, which minister Cotton Mather transcribed to connect words and things in his plain style, and which physician William Douglass satirized to reveal the gap between slaves' words and the true, dangerous nature of inoculation. Chapter four examines how James Grainger incorporated obeah, Africans' medico-religious practices, into his georgic poem to produce images of productive slaves and to construct new conceptions of obeah as witchcraft. Finally, the epilogue examines the ways in which colonists' disavowal of Native and African knowledge as magical continued to haunt U.S. Americans' literary practices, as seen in Arthur Mervyn's gothic tale of his encounter with a healthy black hearse driver during a yellow fever epidemic and Richard Allen and Absalom Jones' argument that blacks possessed superior knowledge of the epidemic. References References (179)

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Description “Examines the literary repercussions of encounters between European, Native American, and African medical philosophies throughout the British American colonies.” (from the abstract) Cited in Diss. Abstr. Int. A 70/09 (2010). Pub. no. AAT 3372997.


Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB001560648/

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Authors & Contributors
Bastos, Cristiana
Beisaw, April M.
Brooke, John Hedley
Carey, Daniel
Cohen, Matt
Hämäläinen, Pekka
Journals
Journal of Southern African Studies
Environmental history
Agricultural History
Archives Internationales d'Histoire des Sciences
East Asian Science, Technology and Society: An International Journal
Medical History
Publishers
Ashgate
Oxford University Press
College of William and Mary
Brill
Harvard University Press
Pickering & Chatto
Concepts
Colonialism
Cross-cultural interaction; cultural influence
Native American civilization and culture
Great Britain, colonies
Medicine
Western world, civilization and culture
People
Eden, Richard
Hakluyt, Richard
Mandeville, John
Winthrop, John
Time Periods
18th century
17th century
Early modern
16th century
19th century
20th century
Places
North America
India
Europe
United States
Africa
China
Institutions
Jesuits (Society of Jesus)
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