Antiblackness and Global Health

A Response to Ebola in the Colonial Wake

Lioba Hirsch

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Pluto Press img Link Publisher

Geisteswissenschaften, Kunst, Musik / Pädagogik

Beschreibung

Antiblackness and Global Health offers a major new account of the 2014-2016 West African Ebola crisis and a radical perspective on the racial politics of global health. 

Lioba Hirsch traces the legacies of colonialism across the landscape of global health in Sierra Leone, showing how this history underpinned the international response to Ebola. The book moves from the material and atmospheric traces of colonialism and enslavement in Freetown, to the forms of knowledge presented in colonial archives and in contemporary expert accounts, to disease control and care practices. 

As the Covid-19 pandemic has revealed, health inequalities around the world disproportionately affect people of African descent. This book aims to equip critical scholars, medical and humanitarian practitioners, policy makers and health activists with the tools and knowledge to challenge antiblackness in global health practice and politics. The book argues that Black Studies can inform future research on medical interventions in Africa by unpacking postcolonial silences, centring Black perspectives and highlighting the endurance of colonial infrastructures in the present.

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Schlagwörter

colonial imaginaries, racism, Black Studies, racism and global health, Colonial infrastructure, racism and medicine, antiblackness, Freetown, Sierra Leone, Black Studies and global health, pandemic responses, colonial medicine, antiblackness and global health, 2024-2016 ebola epidemic, ebola crisis, Global Health, West Africa, colonialism, health humanitarianism, Covid-19, global health crises, health interventions