Howard Heather A
a Department of Anthropology , Michigan State University , East Lansing , Michigan , USA.
Med Anthropol. 2014;33(6):529-45. doi: 10.1080/01459740.2013.828722.
The construction of illness as an inscription on the body of colonization figures importantly among Indigenous community-based service and health care providers. While residential schools and diabetes have both been characterized as products of colonization, little work has been done to examine how they are connected to and informative for health provider practice. The research data presented in this article come from a collaborative urban Indigenous community-based study examining the legacy of negative relationships with food that was instilled in residential schools and used in diabetes intervention. I illustrate how residential school disciplined eating, providing a context for understanding the contemporary production of Indigenous health knowledge and practice in the urban setting, and the diet-related management of diabetes.
将疾病建构为殖民化在身体上的印记,这在基于原住民社区的服务和医疗保健提供者中具有重要意义。虽然寄宿学校和糖尿病都被视为殖民化的产物,但很少有人研究它们如何与医疗保健提供者的实践相关联并为其提供信息。本文所呈现的研究数据来自一项基于城市原住民社区的合作研究,该研究考察了寄宿学校中灌输的与食物的负面关系的遗留影响,并将其用于糖尿病干预。我将说明寄宿学校如何规范饮食,为理解城市环境中当代原住民健康知识和实践的产生以及与饮食相关的糖尿病管理提供背景。