TY - JOUR
T1 - Decolonising "man', resituating pandemic
T2 - An intervention in the pathogenesis of colonial capitalism
AU - Jolly, Rosemary J.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 BMJ Publishing Group. All rights reserved.
PY - 2022/6/1
Y1 - 2022/6/1
N2 - This paper brings together fifth-wave public health theory and a decolonised approach to the human informed by the Caribbean thinker, Sylvia Wynter, and the primary exponent of African Humanism, Es'kia Mpahlele. Sub-Saharan indigenous ways of thinking the human as co-constitutive in a subject we might call human-animal-"environment', in conjunction with the subcontinent's experiences of colonial damage in disease "prevention' and "treatment', demonstrate the lack of genuine engagement with Indigenous wisdom in Western medical practice. The paper offers a decolonial reading of pandemic history, focused primarily on the human immunodefiency virus (HIV), the severe acute respiratory syndrome of 2003 caused by the SARS Covid 1 virus (SARS-CoV1) and COVID-19, caused by the SARS COVID 2 virus (SARS-CoV2) to demonstrate the importance of the co-constitutive subject in understanding the genesis of these pandemics as driven by colonial-capitalism. I emphasise that prevention will indeed take the kinds of massive changes proposed by fifth-wave public health theory. However, I differ from the proponents of that theory in an insistence that the new kind of thinking of the human Hanlon et al call for, has already been conceived: just not within the confines of the normative human of Western culture. I illustrate that Western Global Health approaches remain constitutionally "deaf' to approaches that, although the West may not understand this to be the case, arise from fundamentally different - and extra-anthropocentric - notions of the human. In this context, Man as Wynter names Him is a subject ripe for decolonisation, rather than a premier site of capitalist development, including that of healthcare provision. Recognising that most of us are not individually able to change the structural violence of the colonial capitalist system in which Global Health practices are embedded, I conclude with implications drawn from my argument for quotidian practices that enable healthcare providers see their actions within a harm reduction paradigm, in the context of communities experiencing intergenerational impoverishment consequent on colonial violence.
AB - This paper brings together fifth-wave public health theory and a decolonised approach to the human informed by the Caribbean thinker, Sylvia Wynter, and the primary exponent of African Humanism, Es'kia Mpahlele. Sub-Saharan indigenous ways of thinking the human as co-constitutive in a subject we might call human-animal-"environment', in conjunction with the subcontinent's experiences of colonial damage in disease "prevention' and "treatment', demonstrate the lack of genuine engagement with Indigenous wisdom in Western medical practice. The paper offers a decolonial reading of pandemic history, focused primarily on the human immunodefiency virus (HIV), the severe acute respiratory syndrome of 2003 caused by the SARS Covid 1 virus (SARS-CoV1) and COVID-19, caused by the SARS COVID 2 virus (SARS-CoV2) to demonstrate the importance of the co-constitutive subject in understanding the genesis of these pandemics as driven by colonial-capitalism. I emphasise that prevention will indeed take the kinds of massive changes proposed by fifth-wave public health theory. However, I differ from the proponents of that theory in an insistence that the new kind of thinking of the human Hanlon et al call for, has already been conceived: just not within the confines of the normative human of Western culture. I illustrate that Western Global Health approaches remain constitutionally "deaf' to approaches that, although the West may not understand this to be the case, arise from fundamentally different - and extra-anthropocentric - notions of the human. In this context, Man as Wynter names Him is a subject ripe for decolonisation, rather than a premier site of capitalist development, including that of healthcare provision. Recognising that most of us are not individually able to change the structural violence of the colonial capitalist system in which Global Health practices are embedded, I conclude with implications drawn from my argument for quotidian practices that enable healthcare providers see their actions within a harm reduction paradigm, in the context of communities experiencing intergenerational impoverishment consequent on colonial violence.
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U2 - 10.1136/medhum-2021-012267
DO - 10.1136/medhum-2021-012267
M3 - Article
C2 - 35296541
AN - SCOPUS:85127373451
SN - 1468-215X
VL - 48
SP - 221
EP - 229
JO - Medical Humanities
JF - Medical Humanities
IS - 2
ER -