Abstract
Relatively little research has been done on the history of midwifery
at the
Cape, although there has lately been increasing interest in the social
history
of medicine, as well as in the history of abortion, rape, infanticide and
motherhood in South Africa. One of the reasons for the dearth of research
is the relative absence of women, especially black women, from the historical
record. The archival record of what was called the Cape Colony during the
early nineteenth century is rich enough to reveal something about women's
history, however. The Cape was first settled by Europeans in 1652 under
the
auspices of the Dutch East India Company (DEIC), and was captured by the
British in 1795 and again in 1806. During the first half-century of British
rule
at the Cape, urban midwives came under greater professional and official
scrutiny and left some traces in the historical archive. The remaining
absences tell their own stories, too, and in this paper these silences
will be
made to speak, if only softly and tentatively, of the role of women in
colonial
African medical care.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Cited by
10 articles.
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