Description
Against the prevailing view that colonial texts provide insight only into their writers' perspectives, Wisecup demonstrates that Europeans, Natives, and Africans held certain medical ideas in common, including a conception of disease as both a spiritual and a physical entity, and a belief in the power of special rituals or prayers to restore health. As a consequence, medical knowledge and practices operated as a shared form of communication on which everyone drew in order to adapt to a world of devastating new maladies and unfamiliar cures.
By signaling one's relation to supernatural forces, to the natural world, and to other people, medicine became an effective means of communicating a variety of messages about power and identity as well as bodies and minds. Native Americans in Virginia and New England, for example, responded to the nearly simultaneous arrival of mysterious epidemics and peoples by incorporating colonists into explanations of disease, while British American colonists emphasised to their audiences back home the value of medical knowledge drawn from cross-cultural encounters in the New World.
About the Author
Kelly Wisecup is assistant professor of English at the University of North Texas.
Book Information
ISBN 9781625340573
Author Kelly Wisecup
Format Paperback
Page Count 224
Imprint University of Massachusetts Press
Publisher University of Massachusetts Press
Weight(grams) 420g