Article ID: CBB117484363

The Indian Doctress in the Nineteenth-Century United States: Race, Medicine, and Labor (2021)

unapi

This article addresses the robust market in “Indian medicine” that flourished in the nineteenth century—partly due to the influence of urbanization, industrialization, and new technologies of print—and the specific roles that Indian doctresses played in that phenomenon. Indian doctresses in the United States operated at the intersection of cultural values and beliefs regarding womanhood, medicine, and American Indians. Not all of these women were of Native ancestry, but they all mobilized widespread ideas about Native peoples while seeking entrepreneurial success as healers. Using print culture, the author analyzes strategies employed by women who worked as Indian doctresses and patterns of reactions to their efforts. By combining profiles of women who worked as Indian doctresses with popular but not always positive representations of the type, the article offers a kind of composite biography of an occupation. Women from a wide variety of backgrounds fused caregiving skills with popular assumptions—particularly those involving “indigenous anti-modernity”—to make a living. In this way, Indian doctresses also became useful symbolic figures upon whom changing conceptions of race, gender, and class could be projected and debated. The author thus aims to shed new light not only on histories of American medicine but also on the labors of American women and the business of Indian representation during the nineteenth century.

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https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB117484363/

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Authors & Contributors
Kuster, Megan
Hill-Saya, Blake
Jennifer P. Mathews
Jacqueline D. Antonovich
John Robert Gust
Mas, Catherine
Journals
Women's History Review
Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences
Journal of Medical Biography
Journal of Colonialism and Colonial History
History and Anthropology
Historical Studies in the Natural Sciences
Publishers
Yale University Press
University of Toronto Press
University of North Carolina Press
University of Nebraska Press
University of California Press
University of Arkansas Press
Concepts
Medicine and race
Cross-cultural interaction; cultural influence
Physicians; doctors
Indigenous peoples; indigeneity
Labor and laborers
Medicine
People
Moore, Aaron McDuffie
Stanner, William Edward Hanley
Rush, Benjamin
Nightingale, Florence
Colenso, William
Time Periods
19th century
20th century
20th century, early
18th century
20th century, late
Meiji period (Japan, 1868-1910)
Places
United States
Australia
Mexico
Yucatán (Mexico)
Miami (Florida)
Papua New Guinea
Institutions
University of Miami
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