Sickness and Health in Africa
Depending on the level of his or her resources, a sick person in Africa potentially has access to a variety of options for treatment. How illness is perceived becomes a crucial determinant in how people seek care. Despite the array of treatment options, the state of public health in most African countries has become woefully inadequate. While the reasons for this decline in health status are related to questions of the international political economy, they can also be traced historically. This class studies the history of health, healing, and medical practices in Africa in order to identify the social, historic, and economic factors that influence how therapeutic systems in Africa have changed over time. We will investigate a range of topics, including the place of traditional healers in providing care, the impact of the AIDS pandemic on overall public health, and the role of globalization in changing the structure of health-care delivery in most African countries.
History courses
- Art and the Sacred in Late Antiquity and the Middle Ages
- Cinema and Society in the Middle East and North Africa
- First-Year Studies: Gender and the Culture of War in US History, 1775-1975
- First-Year Studies: “In the Tradition”: An Introduction to African American History and Black Cultural Renaissance
- First-Year Studies: The Sixties
- France and Germany in the 20th Century
- Gender, Education, and Opportunity in Africa
- Harvest: A Social History of Agriculture in Latin America
- Hunger and Excess: Histories, Politics, and Cultures of Food
- Ideas of Africa: Africa Writes Back
- Imperial Russia: Power and Society
- In/Migration: How Immigrants and Migrants Changed New York City From a Small Trading Post to an Emerging World Metropolis
- Leisure and Danger
- “Mystic Chords of Memory”: Myth, Tradition, and the Making of American Nationalism
- Public Stories, Private Lives: Methods of Oral History
- Reform and Revolution in the Contemporary Middle East and North Africa
- Revolution and Counterrevolution in Central America
- Romantic Europe
- Sickness and Health in Africa
- The American Revolution and Its Legacy: From British to American Nationalism
- The Black Arts Renaissance & American Culture: Rethinking Urban and Ethnic History in America
- The Cold War In History and Film
- The Contemporary Practice of International Law
- The Idea of a Balance of Power
- The U.S. Constitution: Interpretation and History
- Tudor England: Politics, Gender, and Religion. An Introductory Workshop in Doing History

