激活甘地和卫生民族主义:将健康转化为斯瓦拉杰的物质化

IF 0.2 Q2 HISTORY Studies in History Pub Date : 2023-02-01 DOI:10.1177/02576430231183509
Apalak Das
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引用次数: 0

摘要

健康定义了一个国家——自19世纪以来,西方的自由民主国家一直对国家的健康有着强制性的要求,尽管与此同时,他们对殖民地的健康非常反感,除了白人飞地,那里的卫生改善比本土城镇的卫生改善更重要。只有在细菌理论萌芽之后,殖民地国家才认真考虑到“被殖民者”的健康问题。然而,这些关于健康和卫生的思想、辩论、方法和殖民地遭遇塑造了甘地对身体、卫生和民族主义的看法。甘地将斯瓦拉杰等同于思想、身体和灵魂的清洁,即“建设性计划”,与公民不服从等“阻碍性计划”形成鲜明对比。对甘地来说,一个国家可以通过净化自我和“他人”来真正达到斯瓦拉杰。通过《建设性方案》和《卫生指令》,以前被“殖民化”的尸体现在被“国有化”了。本文试图探索甘地关于卫生和健康的叙述,以及斯瓦拉吉的概念如何与新兴的健康教育相结合。
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Enlivening Gandhi and Sanitary Nationalism: Transmuting Health into Materialization of Swaraj
Health defines the nation—since the nineteenth century, the liberal democratic states in the West had been compulsive about the nation’s health, albeit, at the same time, they were much repulsive towards the health of the colonies, except the white enclaves where sanitary improvement was prioritized more than that of native towns. It was only after the germination of germ theory that colonial states took the health of the ‘colonized’ into account on a serious note. Nevertheless, these whirling ideas, debates, approaches and colonial encounters regarding health and hygiene shaped Gandhi’s perception on body, sanitation and nationalism. The Gandhian way of equating Swaraj with the cleanliness of mind, body and soul, i.e., ‘Constructive Programme’, was in contrast to the ‘Obstructive Programme’ like civil disobedience. To Gandhi, a nation could truly attain Swaraj by cleansing the self and the ‘others’. The bodies, previously ‘colonized’, were now ‘nationalized’ through the Constructive Programme and health directives. This article seeks to explore those Gandhian narratives on sanitation and health and the way in which the notion of Swaraj was enmeshed with the emerging health education.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.40
自引率
40.00%
发文量
15
期刊介绍: Studies in History reflects the considerable expansion and diversification that has occurred in historical research in India in recent years. The old preoccupation with political history has been integrated into a broader framework which places equal emphasis on social, economic and cultural history. Studies in History examines regional problems and pays attention to some of the neglected periods of India"s past. The journal also publishes articles concerning countries other than India. It provides a forum for articles on the writing of different varieties of history, and contributions challenging received wisdom on long standing issues.
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