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Unequal Cures: Public Health and Political Change in Bolivia, 1900–1950

Autor Ann Zulawski
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 16 ian 2007
Unequal Cures illuminates the connections between public health and political change in Bolivia from the beginning of the twentieth century, when the country was a political oligarchy, until the eve of the 1952 national revolution that ushered in universal suffrage, agrarian reform, and the nationalization of Bolivia’s tin mines. Ann Zulawski examines both how the major ideological and social transformations that took place during these years changed thinking about medicine and how ideas of public health figured in debates about what kind of country Bolivia should become. Zulawski argues that the populist politics that emerged in the 1930s and 1940s helped to consolidate Bolivia’s medical profession and that improved public health was essential to the creation of a modern state. Yet she finds that at mid-century women, indigenous Bolivians, and the poor were still considered inferior to other citizens. They received different medical treatments and levels of care as a result. Drawing on hospital and cemetery records, censuses, doctors’ assessments of patients’ conditions, newspaper accounts, and interviews, Zulawski describes the major medical problems that Bolivia faced during the first half of the twentieth century, their social and economic causes, and what was done to ameliorate them. Her analysis encompasses the Rockefeller Foundation’s campaign against yellow fever, the almost total collapse of Bolivia’s health care system during the disastrous Chaco War with Paraguay (1932–35), an assessment of women’s health in light of the social and economic realities of their lives, and a look at Manicomio Pacheco, the national mental hospital. An important social and intellectual history, Unequal Cures reveals the vital interplay between medicine and state formation in Bolivia.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780822339168
ISBN-10: 0822339161
Pagini: 253
Ilustrații: 12 b&w photographs, 2 maps
Dimensiuni: 161 x 235 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.75 kg
Editura: Duke University Press
Colecția Duke University Press

Recenzii

“Unequal Cures is an original and well-crafted historical study that opens fresh new perspectives on old issues, namely the formation of racial, class, gender, and national identities in a modernizing multiethnic nation—in this case, Bolivia. This fascinating and sweeping history of nation-making told through the rare lens of public health discourses and policies is a first-rate contribution to the fields of Andean studies and the social history of medicine in Latin America.”—Brooke Larson, author of Trials of Nation Making: Liberalism, Race, and Ethnicity in the Andes, 1810–1910“This meticulous study of Bolivia, one of the poorest countries in Latin America, shows why doctors and public health officials were unequal to the task of improving the health of the majority of its citizens in the first half of the twentieth century. Using the tools of social and medical history to great effect, Ann Zulawski demonstrates that the divisions of ethnicity separating the small white elite from the mass of the Indian population meant that the gap between the rhetoric of biomedical improvement and the reality of Indian ill health remained huge, even in the more progressive 1940s and 1950s. A sad and important contribution to the field.”—Nancy Leys Stepan, Professor of History, Columbia University

Notă biografică

Ann Zulawski is Professor of History and Latin American Studies at Smith College. She is the author of "They Eat from Their Labor: Work and Social Change in Colonial Bolivia."

Textul de pe ultima copertă

"This meticulous study of Bolivia, one of the poorest countries in Latin America, shows why doctors and public health officials were unequal to the task of improving the health of the majority of its citizens in the first half of the twentieth century. Using the tools of social and medical history to great effect, Ann Zulawski demonstrates that the divisions of ethnicity separating the small white elite from the mass of the Indian population meant that the gap between the rhetoric of biomedical improvement and the reality of Indian ill health remained huge, even in the more progressive 1940s and 1950s. A sad and important contribution to the field."--Nancy Leys Stepan, Professor of History, Columbia University

Descriere

First systematic medical history of Bolivia for the 20th century, viewing political change from the perspective of public health