Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-p2v8j Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-30T15:02:42.815Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Social History of Africa in the Future: Medical-Related Issues

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 May 2014

Extract

When I was first asked to write this paper, I was instructed that the whole field of social history was open to my purview and that my efforts should be directed to future accomplishments and not past glories. My first impulse was to wander over to the library and try to determine in fact what social history was in order to bring some boundaries to my paper. After looking through several of the standard reference works on the social sciences and their definitions of social history, I began to feel that I was not the only person unsure of the boundaries between social/political/economic/intellectual/religious history. Furthermore the request to look only into the future and not the past left me feeling out of sorts given my historian's training. Thus, I decided instead to try to examine several of the many areas of the social history of Africa which are largely unworked or need examination in more depth.

The medical history of Africa is an area in which many fruitful and significant opportunities exist for further research. Work in this field has been done in several different countries and the results are beginning to appear in a growing number of books and articles. Yet there are still a great many important topics and geographic areas which remain to be explored. These range from local issues such as the sleeping sickness epidemic which ravaged the Zaire River basin near the turn of the century, to the regional differences of experiences with epidemic disease in early colonial Africa, especially those differences between East and West Africa (Feierman, 1985).

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © African Studies Association 1987

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Dawson, Marc H. 1983. “Socio-economic and Epidemiological Change in Kenya.” Ph.D. dissertation; University of Wisconsin-Madison.Google Scholar
Dawson, Marc H. 1987a. “The 1920s Anti-Yaws Campaigns and Colonial Medical Policy in Kenya.” International Journal of African Historical Studies 20/3.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Dawson, Marc H. 1987b. “The Changing Patterns of Health, Nutrition, and Population in Central Kenya: 1890-1945,” in Gregory, J. and Cordell, D. (eds.) African Population and Capitalism: Historical Studies. Beverly Hills: Sage Publications.Google Scholar
Feierman, S. 1985. “Struggles for Control: The Social Roots of Health and Healing in Modern Africa.” African Studies Review 28/2–3: 73147.Google Scholar
Gilks, J.L. 1924. “A Medical Safari in a Native Reserve.” Kenya Medical Journal 1:271.Google Scholar
Kenya National Archives. 1915/1916. Kiambu District Annual Report.Google Scholar
Kenya National Archives. 1923. Annual Medical Report.Google Scholar
Kenya National Archives. 1925. Annual Medical Report.Google Scholar
Patterson, K. David. 1979. “Health in Urban Ghana: The Case of Accra, 1900-1940.” Social Science and Medicine 13B: 251–68.Google Scholar
Patterson, K. David. 1981. Health in Colonial Ghana: Disease, Medicine, and Socio-Economic Change, 1900-1955. Waltham, MA: Crossroads Press.Google Scholar
Rosenberg, C. 1962. The Cholera Years. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar