Narrative of Feminist Resistance: Exploring Regulations of Leprosy in Postcolonial India

D. Jain, K. Kartik
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Abstract

Abstract Colonial policies on leprosy were predicated on the enactment of laws and the administration of systems that targeted ‘vagrancy' as disease control, subsuming classist, casteist, gendered and racial narratives within state response to the disease. Colonial state power, juxtaposed with the social capital of the Indian elite and ‘employed' middle classes, created exclusive spaces for containment of (hyper visible, and therefore most vulnerable) leprosy sufferers belonging to ‘lower-caste,' poor communities. Colonial regimes of disease control built on underlying notions of ‘morality' and ‘hygiene’ subsist, in one form or another, in the post-colonial state, furthered by neoliberal institutions that repurpose these notions through their development policies. Leprosy regulation narratives are still predicated on rationales relating to hygiene and economic development, which focus on caste, gender and hygiene markers for regulation. Resistance, in the background of colonial conceptions, policies and legislations relating to leprosy, has manifested within the very structures that have been set up to forcibly confine and isolate poor and marginalised persons with leprosy. In this article, we examine spaces of power created by the colonial state, giving rise to community spaces, unique power negotiations and narratives of resistance of the most marginalised. We critically trace the resistance of the ‘leper’ against draconian legislations, as well as ostracisation in the colonial and postcolonial period. Leprosy colonies have become sites of resistance where persons affected with leprosy did not passively suffer, but could reclaim their agency and re-imagine identities more positive than those ascribed to the infection. The alternative kinship structures that develop in these colonies facilitate unique care models that challenge dominant notions of families, hitherto predicated on marriage, adoption, or relatedness. Thus, we argue that leprosy colonies can be thought of not only as places of healing but as healing in and of themselves.
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女权主义抵抗叙事:后殖民时期印度麻风病的规律探索
殖民时期的麻风病政策是建立在制定法律和管理系统的基础上的,这些法律和管理系统将“流浪”作为疾病控制的目标,将阶级主义、种姓主义、性别和种族叙事纳入国家对麻风病的应对之中。殖民国家权力与印度精英阶层和“受雇”中产阶级的社会资本并列,为属于“低种姓”贫穷社区的麻风病患者(非常显眼,因此也是最脆弱的)创造了专属空间。建立在“道德”和“卫生”基本概念基础上的殖民疾病控制制度在后殖民国家以这样或那样的形式存在,并通过其发展政策重新定义这些概念的新自由主义机构进一步推动。麻风病监管叙述仍然以卫生和经济发展相关的理由为基础,重点放在种姓、性别和卫生监管标志上。在与麻风病有关的殖民概念、政策和立法的背景下,在为强行限制和孤立贫穷和边缘化麻风病患者而建立的结构中,已经出现了抵抗。在这篇文章中,我们考察了殖民国家创造的权力空间,从而产生了社区空间、独特的权力谈判和最边缘化群体的抵抗叙事。我们批判性地追踪“麻风病人”对严厉立法的抵制,以及殖民和后殖民时期的排斥。麻风病聚集地已成为抵抗场所,在那里,麻风病患者不是被动地受苦,而是可以重新获得他们的能动性,并重新想象比那些归因于感染的人更积极的身份。在这些殖民地发展起来的另类亲属关系结构促进了独特的照顾模式,挑战了迄今为止以婚姻、收养或亲缘关系为基础的主流家庭观念。因此,我们认为麻风病聚居区不仅可以被认为是治疗的地方,而且可以被认为是自身的治疗场所。
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CiteScore
0.60
自引率
40.00%
发文量
1
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