Medicine that Walks
Disease, Medicine, and Canadian Plains Native People, 1880-1940
- Publisher
- University of Toronto Press, Scholarly Publishing Division
- Initial publish date
- Jun 2001
- Category
- General, General, Native American Studies
-
Hardback
- ISBN
- 9780802047281
- Publish Date
- Jun 2001
- List Price
- $72.00
Classroom Resources
Where to buy it
Out of print
This edition is not currently available in bookstores. Check your local library or search for used copies at Abebooks.
Description
In this seminal work, Maureen Lux takes issue with the 'biological invasion' theory of the impact of disease on Plains Aboriginal people. She challenges the view that Aboriginal medicine was helpless to deal with the diseases brought by European newcomers and that Aboriginal people therefore surrendered their spirituality to Christianity. Biological invasion, Lux argues, was accompanied by military, cultural, and economic invasions, which, combined with the loss of the bison herds and forced settlement on reserves, led to population decline. The diseases killing the Plains people were not contagious epidemics but the grinding diseases of poverty, malnutrition, and overcrowding.
"Medicine That Walks" provides a grim social history of medicine over the turn of the century. It traces the relationship between the ill and the well, from the 1880s when Aboriginal people were perceived as a vanishing race doomed to extinction, to the 1940s when they came to be seen as a disease menace to the Canadian public. Drawing on archival material, ethnography, archaeology, epidemiology, ethnobotany, and oral histories, Lux describes how bureaucrats, missionaries, and particularly physicians explained the high death rates and continued ill health of the Plains people in the quasi-scientific language of racial evolution that inferred the survival of the fittest. The Plains people's poverty and ill health were seen as both an inevitable stage in the struggle for 'civilization' and as further evidence that assimilation was the only path to good health.
The people lived and coped with a cruel set of circumstances, but they survived, in large part because they consistently demanded a role in their own health and recovery. Painstakingly researched and convincingly argued, this work will change our understanding of a significant era in western Canadian history.
Winner of the 2001 Clio Award, Prairies Region, presented by the Canadian Historical Association, and the 2002 Jason A. Hannah Medal
About the author
Maureen K. Lux is a post-doctoral fellow at the Hannah Institute for the History of Medicine.
Awards
- Winner, Jason A Hannah Medal, Royal Society of Canada
- Short-listed, Clio Award (Prairies Region), Canadian Historical Association
- Short-listed, Berkshire Book Prize, Berkshire Conference of Women Historians
- Winner, Saskatchewan Book Award (Scholarly Writing)