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'That's how I saw it anyways': Foucauldian genealogy toward understanding an historical outbreak of amebiasis in Loon Lake

dc.contributor.advisorCarlson, Keith T.en_US
dc.contributor.committeeMemberHandy, Jamesen_US
dc.contributor.committeeMemberZellar, Garyen_US
dc.contributor.committeeMemberBidwell, Kristinaen_US
dc.creatorWiebe, Lesleyen_US
dc.date.accessioned2015-10-24T12:01:05Z
dc.date.available2015-10-24T12:01:05Z
dc.date.created2014-01en_US
dc.date.issued2015-10-23en_US
dc.date.submittedJanuary 2014en_US
dc.description.abstractThis thesis explores the utility of the conflated term “colonial medicine” by drawing on events during an historical outbreak of amebic dysentery that occurred on several Indian Reservations near Loon Lake, Saskatchewan, during the 1960s and ‘70s, including a series of government-sponsored drug trials conducted to stem the outbreak. Largely devoid of the racialized notions characterizing primary documents used by previous scholars of ‘colonial medicine’, the medical journal articles, government memorandums, and letters written by physicians in connection with the outbreak and trials reveal their immersion in ‘la clinique’, or an anatomo-clinical discourse similar to what theorist Michel Foucault described in Birth of the Clinic. Conversely, conversations with Loon Lake area community members on the subjects of the outbreak and trials reveal their multiplex and nuanced reactions to medical and colonial discourses. Arguably, then, when writing about past events, historians should weigh ‘medicine’ and colonial discourse separately. Essential methodological consideration was given to the Foucauldian concept of ‘disinterring’ popular knowledge. Drawing on Foucault’s edited works Power/Knowledge and I, Pierre Riviére, the subjugated knowledges of Aboriginal community members, physicians, sanitation workers, and government employees gleaned through interviews and text are contrasted as per his example in these works with the false functionalism of ‘scientificity’. Moreover, when considered in tandem, these subjugated knowledges illustrate a ‘structural violence’, following anthropologist Paul Farmer’s methodology for describing such phenomena in Pathologies of Power. Overarchingly, they obscure the paradigmatic dichotomies (‘doctor’/‘patient’, ‘patient’/the healthy person, ‘colonizer’/‘colonized’, ‘oppressor’/‘oppressed’) espoused in medical, colonial, and even post-colonial discourses. This understanding forces the reflexive recognition that–if we accept rhetorician Christopher Bracken’s assertion in Magical Criticism there is a recourse to savage philosophy within academia–what we say as historians has consequence beyond discourse, possibly creating new ‘subjects’ in a Foucauldian, disciplined society.en_US
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10388/ETD-2014-01-1481en_US
dc.language.isoengen_US
dc.subjecthistoryen_US
dc.subjectethnohistoryen_US
dc.subjectAboriginal historyen_US
dc.subjectAboriginal health historyen_US
dc.subjectmedical historyen_US
dc.subjectSaskatchewanen_US
dc.subjectLoon Lakeen_US
dc.subjectamebic dysenteryen_US
dc.subjectamebiasisen_US
dc.subjectmetronidazoleen_US
dc.title'That's how I saw it anyways': Foucauldian genealogy toward understanding an historical outbreak of amebiasis in Loon Lakeen_US
dc.type.genreThesisen_US
dc.type.materialtexten_US
thesis.degree.departmentHistoryen_US
thesis.degree.disciplineHistoryen_US
thesis.degree.grantorUniversity of Saskatchewanen_US
thesis.degree.levelMastersen_US
thesis.degree.nameMaster of Arts (M.A.)en_US

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