Cancer and the Kali Yuga: Gender, Inequality, and Health in South India

By Cecilia Coale Van Hollen

As news spread that more women died from breast and cervical cancer in India than anywhere else in the world in the early twenty-first century, global public health planners accelerated efforts to prevent, screen, and treat these reproductive cancers in low-income Indian communities. Cancer and the Kali Yuga reveals that women who are the targets of these interventions in Tamil Nadu, South India, hold views about cancer causality, late diagnosis, and challenges to accessing treatment that differ from the public health discourse. Cecilia Coale Van Hollen’s critical feminist ethnography centers and amplifies the voices of Dalit Tamil women who situate cancer within the nexus of their class, caste, and gender positions. Dalit women’s narratives about their experiences with cancer present a powerful and poignant critique of the sociocultural and political-economic conditions that marginalize them and jeopardize their health and well-being in twenty-first-century India.

Read the book here.

Inequality and expendability in early public health

By Elise A. Mitchell and Mathieu Corteel

This seminar examined two early public health interventions and their impact on the morals and ethics of the field. More particularly, Mitchell discussed the quarantining of slave ships during the Caribbean Slave Trade in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries. She argues that these policies and practices reasserted recently-arrived enslaved Africans’ apolitical status and rendered them expendable in order to preserve the health of those considered part of the colonial commonwealth. 

Corteel looked at the assumptions surrounding 19th century health statistics, focusing on the normativity of public hygiene statistics on poverty before and during the 1832 cholera epidemic in Paris. Through this, he questions the moralistic emergence of public hygiene values through the lens of inequality.  

Read more and watch the seminar here.

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