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Until now our knowledge of African health and healing has been
extensive but fragmented. Here in eighteen essays is the first
comprehensive account of disease, health,and healing practices in
the African continent. The contributors all emphasize the social
conditions linked to ill health and the development of local
healing traditions, from Morocco to South Africa and from the
precolonial era to the present. Several chapters illustrate how the
most basic facts of everyday life encourage the spread of disease
and chape the possibilities of survival. Other discuss a variety of
healing practices: drums of affliction in Bantu-speaking societies,
Muslim humoral medicine, and biomedicine as practiced in hospitals
and dispensaries. The editors provide introductory overviews
explaining why and how health and disease are related to
historical, economic, and political phenomena.
Scholars who study peasant society now realize that peasants are
not passive, but quite capable of acting in their own interests.
Debate has continued, though, on whether coherent political ideas
emerge within peasant society, or whether peasants act in a world
where political issues are defined by elites. Based on ethnographic
research begun in 1966 that includes interviews with hundreds of
people from all levels of Tanzanian society, ""Peasant
Intellectuals"" aims to alter the perspective from which
anthropologists, historians, and political scientists study both
cultural systems and rural politics. Steven Feierman gives us the
history of the struggles to define the most basic issues of public
political discourse in the Shambaa-speaking region of Tanzania.
Over the past 150 years ruling chiefs, on the one hand, and
dissenting peasants on the other have debated what it is that
enables some regimes to bring life rather than death, prosperity
rather than hunger, justice rather than inequity. Feierman focuses
on the role of peasant intellectuals - men and women who earn their
livelihood by farming and who, at crucial historical moments, have
organized political movements of the greatest long-term
significance. In Shambaii, peasant intellectuals have raised the
issue of democracy, the role of chiefs, the meaning of slavery and
freedom , and the nature of gender relations, and played a critical
role in nationalist campaigns. Feierman also shows that peasant
society contains a rich body of alternative sources of political
language from which future debates will be shaped.
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