Literature DB >> 12486913

The enslaved healers of eighteenth-century Saint Domingue.

Karol Kovalovich Weaver.   

Abstract

Enslaved healers including herbalists, kaperlatas, hospitalières, infirmières, and accoucheuses existed and flourished in the medical world of Saint Domingue. They were responsible for the creation of an indigenous form of medicine on the island. Using Western, African, and Caribbean remedies, they treated their fellow slaves and white residents of the island. Slaves were more comfortable and more familiar with the care and techniques employed by the popular healers, especially the kaperlatas and the herbalists. Plantation managers took advantage of the labor of female medical workers in order to reap economic profits for their planter employers and for themselves. Lower-class whites, unable to afford and unwilling to consult mainstream medical care, sought the assistance of healers known as kaperlatas. Lastly, orthodox medical practitioners turned to slave healers, especially herbalists, to exploit the therapeutic knowledge that the slaves possessed and, in the case of enslaved midwives, to bring them more closely under the authority of European medical men.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12486913     DOI: 10.1353/bhm.2002.0149

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Bull Hist Med        ISSN: 0007-5140            Impact factor:   1.314


  3 in total

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Authors:  Robert Voeks; Charlotte Greene
Journal:  Geogr Rev       Date:  2018-01-22

2.  History of Medicine: Health, Medicine and Disease in the Eighteenth Century.

Authors:  Jonathan Andrews
Journal:  Br J 18th Cent Stud       Date:  2011-12-01

3.  Hidden figures of nursing: The historical contributions of Black nurses and a narrative for those who are unnamed, undocumented and underrepresented.

Authors:  Diana-Lyn Baptiste; Sasha Turner; Nia Josiah; Joyell Arscott; Carmen Alvarez; Ruth-Alma Turkson-Ocran; Tamar Rodney; Yvonne Commodore-Mensah; Lucine Francis; Patty R Wilson; Shaquita Starks; Kamila Alexander; Janiece L Taylor; Olubunmi Ogungbe; Samuel Byiringiro; Marlena C Fisher; Sherma J Charlemagne-Badal; Beatrice Marseille; Sabianca Delva; Janelle Akomah; Emerald Jenkins; Derek T Dangerfield; Gloria Ramsey; Phyllis Sharps; Jill Hamilton
Journal:  J Adv Nurs       Date:  2021-02-10       Impact factor: 3.057

  3 in total

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