Bodies of Knowledge: The Influence of Slaves on the Antebellum Medical Community

The influence of slaves on the south is well documented in areas such as agriculture, music, diet, religion and language. This thesis extends the list to include medicine. It also suggests that the importance of cultural transfer to America from places other than Europe has been overlooked in the hi...

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Main Author: Mitchell, Sarah
Other Authors: History
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/36885
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-65172149731401/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-368852020-09-29T05:43:20Z Bodies of Knowledge: The Influence of Slaves on the Antebellum Medical Community Mitchell, Sarah History Jones, Kathleen W. Bunch-Lyons, Beverly Shifflett, Crandall A. none The influence of slaves on the south is well documented in areas such as agriculture, music, diet, religion and language. This thesis extends the list to include medicine. It also suggests that the importance of cultural transfer to America from places other than Europe has been overlooked in the history of medicine. The medical influence of slaves took the form of botanical remedies, many of them with an African origin, and were disseminated through the treatments of slave healers. Slave medical knowledge offered a viable alternative for whites to both nineteenth-century “heroic” practices and to alternative methods, such as homeopathy and Thomsonianism. In addition, the slave’s body itself was a vehicle of medical influence. Informed by nineteenth-century beliefs about the differences between whites and blacks, antebellum physicians performed experiments upon slave bodies that they could not and did not perform on whites’. Transfer of slave medical knowledge was facilitated by personal contact between individuals, by the publicity surrounding slaves who were set free for revealing cures, through the services of slave healers, through newspapers and medical journals in which whites wrote of slave treatments and acknowledged the source of the information, and through word of mouth. This study uses the theme of ambivalence to reconcile the conflicting attitudes of southern physicians and slaveowners towards slave medical knowledge. Master of Arts 2014-03-14T20:52:07Z 2014-03-14T20:52:07Z 1997-05-02 1998-07-12 1998-05-02 1997-05-02 Thesis etd-65172149731401 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/36885 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-65172149731401/ ABSTRACT.PDF CH1.PDF CH2.PDF CH3.PDF CONCL.PDF CONTENTS.PDF INTRO.PDF SOURCES.PDF THANKS.PDF TITLE.PDF VITA.PDF In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Tech
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Mitchell, Sarah
Bodies of Knowledge: The Influence of Slaves on the Antebellum Medical Community
description The influence of slaves on the south is well documented in areas such as agriculture, music, diet, religion and language. This thesis extends the list to include medicine. It also suggests that the importance of cultural transfer to America from places other than Europe has been overlooked in the history of medicine. The medical influence of slaves took the form of botanical remedies, many of them with an African origin, and were disseminated through the treatments of slave healers. Slave medical knowledge offered a viable alternative for whites to both nineteenth-century “heroic” practices and to alternative methods, such as homeopathy and Thomsonianism. In addition, the slave’s body itself was a vehicle of medical influence. Informed by nineteenth-century beliefs about the differences between whites and blacks, antebellum physicians performed experiments upon slave bodies that they could not and did not perform on whites’. Transfer of slave medical knowledge was facilitated by personal contact between individuals, by the publicity surrounding slaves who were set free for revealing cures, through the services of slave healers, through newspapers and medical journals in which whites wrote of slave treatments and acknowledged the source of the information, and through word of mouth. This study uses the theme of ambivalence to reconcile the conflicting attitudes of southern physicians and slaveowners towards slave medical knowledge. === Master of Arts
author2 History
author_facet History
Mitchell, Sarah
author Mitchell, Sarah
author_sort Mitchell, Sarah
title Bodies of Knowledge: The Influence of Slaves on the Antebellum Medical Community
title_short Bodies of Knowledge: The Influence of Slaves on the Antebellum Medical Community
title_full Bodies of Knowledge: The Influence of Slaves on the Antebellum Medical Community
title_fullStr Bodies of Knowledge: The Influence of Slaves on the Antebellum Medical Community
title_full_unstemmed Bodies of Knowledge: The Influence of Slaves on the Antebellum Medical Community
title_sort bodies of knowledge: the influence of slaves on the antebellum medical community
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/36885
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-65172149731401/
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