Reading Log: Aboriginal Health Readings

Mosby Article:

Mosby’s article explores the goals that nutrition experts attempt to explore within aboriginal communities between 1942 and 1952. The goal was to “study the state of nutrition of the Indian by newly developed medical procedures” (p.146). This goal was attempted through the collection of information on local substance patterns through physical examinations. Coinciding with the medical examinations was controlled experiments on individuals that lacked consent or even knowledge of their happening. When this study first began, right away the researches realized that malnutrition and hunger were playing a frightening role in lack of nutrition. It was thought that perhaps the high rates of diseases present within the community was linked to the lack of proper foods in their diets. During these studies and experiments, major issues were presented and solutions largely ignored. Medical professionals and people of power “recognized the problems of hunger and malnutrition, yet increasingly came to view Aboriginal bodies as ‘experimental materials’ and residential schools and Aboriginal communities as kinds of ‘laboratories’ that they could use to pursue a number of different political and professional interests” (p.148). The major problem of these studies was that they boosted careers of the researchers rather than alter the conditions in the communities. Looking between the lines, to the colonizers addressing the problems of health in Aboriginal communities was “essential to protecting the white population from Indian ‘reservoirs’ and ‘vectors’ of diseases” and specific use of language became a “central justification of the work of Indian Health Services” (p.153). Further, addressing these health issues essentially added to the long term and long standing goal of assimilation. Mosby points out that the issue of malnutrition was rooted in perceived racial characteristics that created the language of the “Indian problem” (p.164). Through the intervention of experts and the transition from traditional food to modern food, Aboriginals were prevented from getting healthy (under white man’s standards) due to barriers set up to keep them inferior.

Gleason Article:

Gleason seeks to explore in her article how and which standards of health identified by professionals were applied to Aboriginal children. Through exploring encouraged health, Gleason seeks to reveal the social construction of health and how race and class influenced this. Further, Gleason looks at the gaps and contradictions associated with the health of Aboriginal children and the reality of what this meant. To justify their actions and beliefs towards and about Aboriginals, modern science was pitted against “superstition and quackery, knowledge against ignorance, right against wrong, [and] life against death” (p.96). Publicly put forth, as quoted by a school nurse, “our chief aim in this special branch of our work is to help develop the Indian into a healthy, respectable, self-supporting citizenship” (p.96). However, the protection of public health revolved around a paradox: “excluding and demonizing a particular portion of that public,” the Aboriginals (p.97). The public health force was driven predominantly by white middle-class male professionals, organized along defensive lines, dependent on the surveillance of the public, and driven by the superior laws of European science” (p.98). This was problematic because the Aboriginals lost the chance to be equal and no matter how much the superior group pushed for good citizenship, no amount of conformity was going to create an equal playing feel due to the long term rooted beliefs of Aboriginals as dirty. While solutions were suggested and even attempted to be implemented, Aboriginals struggled to meet the required standards due to lack of economic means. So, even if they wanted to help their kids, they could not. When it came to “loss of income and social stigma appeared to be of little concern to public health officials” (p.99). Why would they not help them if they claimed so much that they wanted to.

Rutherdale Article:

Rutherdale expresses the idea in her article that Aboriginal bodies were present for reform or colonization of their bodies. The end goal was to colonize Aboriginals but there was a belief that to capture their minds, their bodies had to be captured first. Children were the easiest targets as they could be “trained” easier. Even when the focus is on the adults, such as modernizing birthing practices, the children are still caught in the middle because of the battle wage. Rutherdale explains the process of changing Aboriginal traditional customs of birthing for women, as it was seen as unsafe and barbaric. To completely erase long standing customs in a culture is in a way dehumanizing them.

Links Between the articles

While all three articles focused on different areas of health and had different approaches to dealing with the “Indian problem,” similarities of themes can me made note of. When exploring the idea of embodied citizenship, it is important to understand where this idea comes from and who has power over it. Ideas of good health reflected the views of white middle-class professionals and excluded Aboriginal beliefs entirely. Even though the goal of assimilation was to make Aboriginals like white people, there was the between-the-lines idea that no matter how much they changed, aboriginals would always be inferior. There was also a recurring theme of lack of empathy. This lack of empathy was what justified officials to examine and experiment with Aboriginals. Lastly, all the articles held the idea that there was a need to reform Aboriginal bodies.