Inclusion/exclusion: representation of the Vietnamese in French colonial medical discourse

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2004

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University of Hawaii at Manoa

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Similar to other agencies of colonial expansion, medicine permeated multiple political and sociological layers-at home and abroad-during the creation of the French colonial empire. Within the volumes of medical discourse, representation of the Vietnamese served as a barometer for metropolitan politics, reflecting the constantly changing French self-perception during the turbulent decades from the beginning of World War I to the defeat at Dien Bien Phu. Medical texts, as a forum for 'valid' scientific research, codified the tensions between alterity and 'normalcy' within colonial thought, presenting the dissected 'Other' to an eager public. The bodies of their indochinois subjects were a tableau in which not only the political insecurities of France could be etched, but also served to assuage fears about the French place in the 'order of things.'

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Racism in medicine--History

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Vietnam

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Theses for the degree of Master of Arts (University of Hawaii at Manoa). Asian Studies; no. 3143

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Table of Contents

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