Book contents
- Frontmatter
- CONTENTS
- Acknowledgements
- Dedication
- List of Contributors
- Introduction
- 1 ‘Re-Constructing’ Indian Medicine: The Role of Caste in Late Nineteenth- and Twentieth-Century India
- 2 The Resurgence of Indigenous Medicine in the Age of the HIV/AIDS Pandemic: South Africa Beyond the ‘Miracle’
- 3 Medicine, Medical Knowledge and Healing at the Cape of Good Hope: Khoikhoi, Slaves and Colonists
- 4 Dealing with Disease: Epizootics, Veterinarians and Public Health in Colonial Bengal, 1850–1920
- 5 Mahatma Gandhi under the Plague Spotlight
- 6 Plague Hits the Colonies: India and South Africa at the Turn of the Twentieth Century
- 7 The Blind Men and the Elephant: Imperial Medicine, Medieval Historians and the Role of Rats in the Historiography of Plague
- 8 Physicians, Forceps and Childbirth: Technological Intervention in Reproductive Health in Colonial Bengal
- 9 Not Fit for Punishment: Diagnosing Criminal Lunatics in Late Nineteenth-Century British India
- 10 Multiple Voices and Plausible Claims: Historiography and Colonial Lunatic Asylum Archives
- 11 Death and Empire: Legal Medicine in the Colonization of India and Africa
- Notes
- Index
1 - ‘Re-Constructing’ Indian Medicine: The Role of Caste in Late Nineteenth- and Twentieth-Century India
- Frontmatter
- CONTENTS
- Acknowledgements
- Dedication
- List of Contributors
- Introduction
- 1 ‘Re-Constructing’ Indian Medicine: The Role of Caste in Late Nineteenth- and Twentieth-Century India
- 2 The Resurgence of Indigenous Medicine in the Age of the HIV/AIDS Pandemic: South Africa Beyond the ‘Miracle’
- 3 Medicine, Medical Knowledge and Healing at the Cape of Good Hope: Khoikhoi, Slaves and Colonists
- 4 Dealing with Disease: Epizootics, Veterinarians and Public Health in Colonial Bengal, 1850–1920
- 5 Mahatma Gandhi under the Plague Spotlight
- 6 Plague Hits the Colonies: India and South Africa at the Turn of the Twentieth Century
- 7 The Blind Men and the Elephant: Imperial Medicine, Medieval Historians and the Role of Rats in the Historiography of Plague
- 8 Physicians, Forceps and Childbirth: Technological Intervention in Reproductive Health in Colonial Bengal
- 9 Not Fit for Punishment: Diagnosing Criminal Lunatics in Late Nineteenth-Century British India
- 10 Multiple Voices and Plausible Claims: Historiography and Colonial Lunatic Asylum Archives
- 11 Death and Empire: Legal Medicine in the Colonization of India and Africa
- Notes
- Index
Summary
The history of medicine in India represents a significant trajectory of both resistance and accommodation of various medical forms of knowledge, often associated with changes in the ruling state, its ideologies and imperatives. In this context, it is not surprising that nineteenth- and twentieth-century India was marked by a series of major challenges faced by protagonists of Indian medicine, nationalists, reformers, and influential patrons and elites. What these challenges were, who they were managed by and how they were best managed are some of the questions that often loom large in debates on medicine in colonial India. In discussing Indian medicine under British rule, thus, two main themes emerge: first, the existence of influential local elites, intellectuals, nationalists and reformers, as patrons supporting the medical system; and second, the challenges posed as a result of shifting policies, especially following the implementation of the Montague-Chelmsford Reforms in 1919. While indigenous patrons, although initially hesitant, appropriated indigenous medical knowledge, sometimes reconstructing and reassessing it, power and authority remained issues of concern for protagonists of both Indian and western systems in relation to the Reforms, for the new system of governance allowed more freedom in the hands of Indian ministers to take charge of health issues.
The late nineteenth century witnessed the deployment of science and medicine as signifying cultural authority, forging new alliances alongside the emergence of new associations that enabled the reinforcement of scientific activities, through a small section of western-educated Indians.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Medicine and ColonialismHistorical Perspectives in India and South Africa, pp. 11 - 24Publisher: Pickering & ChattoFirst published in: 2014