Thesis ID: CBB001567611

Doctoring the Bled: Medical Auxiliaries and the Administration of Rural Life in Colonial Algeria, 1904--1954 (2014)

unapi

Clark, Hannah-Louise (Author)


Guenther, Katja
Schayegh, Cyrus
Princeton University
Wailoo, Keith A.
Schayegh, Cyrus
Ragab, Ahmed
Wailoo, Keith A.
Ragab, Ahmed


Publication Date: 2014
Edition Details: Advisor: Guenther, Katja; Committee Members: Wailoo, Keith A., Schayegh, Cyrus, Ragab, Ahmed.
Physical Details: 378 pp.
Language: English

This dissertation examines the professional and personal predicaments experienced by twentieth-century Algerian auxiliaires médicaux and adjoints techniques de la Santé publique . Both cadres comprised Muslim men who were recruited by the French colonial state to provide a limited form of Republican welfare in the Algerian countryside (the bled ). Departing from doctor-centred histories, I interrogate official narratives to uncover how state medicine and hygiene functioned on the ground. Drawing upon national and regional archival collections in Algeria and France, Islamic legal treatises, newspapers, and non-official sources such as private letters and memoirs, genealogical websites and blogs, and oral histories to reconstruct the history of the medical auxiliarat, I explore three different aspects of state medicine and public health in Algeria. First, I demonstrate that local knowledge, Islamic discursive traditions, and pre-colonial forms of benevolence and community welfare continued to operate within Algerian public health, even under French colonial occupation and rule. Second, I disarticulate the conflicts and points of convergence between and among Muslim healthworkers, European doctors and administrators, and local populations. Finally, I adduce the place of medicine and health within technologies of colonial administration, including how the actions of the low-ranking medical auxiliary shaped these technologies. The history of medical auxiliaries forces a re-examination of debates about the colonial state, medicine, and rural agency and the dichotomised representation of Algerian society as comprising two opposed population blocs of coloniser and colonised. Through new archival discoveries, and through reading French sources in the light of Arabic sources (and vice versa), the dissertation illustrates that state medicine was not only a tool of colonial elites but also a resource that held considerable appeal for both educated and unlettered Muslims and settlers. The work of medical auxiliaries expanded the powers of the state to manage human populations and disease, and simultaneously engaged the rural populace in the idea of state medical relief. This approach opens up a new direction in the empirical study of indigenous medical actors in empire and breaks new ground for a social history of colonialism in Algeria.

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Description Cited in Dissertation Abstracts International-A 76/03(E), Sep 2015. Proquest Document ID: 1629713905.


Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB001567611/

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Authors & Contributors
Ramos de Viesca, Maríablanca
Charlotte Ann Chopin
Winter, Christine
Greenfield, Jerome
Arnab Chakraborty
Moon, Mira
Concepts
Colonialism
Medicine
Indigenous peoples; indigeneity
Physicians; doctors
Rural history
France, colonies
Time Periods
19th century
20th century, early
18th century
Early modern
Modern
20th century, late
Places
France
Algeria
Mexico
Papua New Guinea
Australia
England
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