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Curing the Colonizers - Hydrotherapy, Climatology, and French Colonial Spas (Paperback, New Ed)
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Discovery Miles 7 860
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Curing the Colonizers - Hydrotherapy, Climatology, and French Colonial Spas (Paperback, New Ed)
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"Beware! Against the poison that is Africa, there is but one
antidote: Vichy." So ran a 1924 advertisement for one of France's
main spas. Throughout the French empire, spas featuring water
cures, often combined with "climatic" cures, thrived during the
nineteenth century and the twentieth. Water cures and high-altitude
resorts were widely believed to serve vital therapeutic and even
prophylactic functions against tropical disease and the tropics
themselves. The Ministry of the Colonies published bulletins
accrediting a host of spas thought to be effective against tropical
ailments ranging from malaria to yellow fever; specialized
guidebooks dispensed advice on the best spas for "colonial ills."
Administrators were granted regular furloughs to "take the waters"
back home in France. In the colonies, spas assuaged homesickness by
creating oases of France abroad. Colonizers frequented spas to
maintain their strength, preserve their French identity, and
cultivate their difference from the colonized.Combining the
histories of empire, leisure, tourism, culture, and medicine, Eric
T. Jennings sheds new light on the workings of empire by examining
the rationale and practice of French colonial hydrotherapy between
1830 and 1962. He traces colonial acclimatization theory and the
development of a "science" of hydrotherapy appropriate to colonial
spaces, and he chronicles and compares the histories of spas in
several French colonies-Guadeloupe, Madagascar, Tunisia, and
Reunion-and in France itself. Throughout Curing the Colonizers,
Jennings illuminates the relationship between indigenous and French
colonial therapeutic knowledge as well as the ultimate failure of
the spas to make colonialism physically or morally safe for the
French.
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