Abstract
This article analyzes one kind of colonial equipment designed
in the early twentieth century for the purpose of providing medical assistance
to the indigenous populations of Angola and Mozambique. I will
refer to it as a ‘hut-hospital’, although it had several forms and designations.
The layout of hut-hospitals consisted of a main building and a
number of hut-like units that were supposedly more attractive to the indigenous
population and therefore more efficient than the large, rectangular
buildings of the main colonial hospitals. Using different sources, including
three-dimensional plaster models of hut-hospitals, photographs, legal
documents, and 1920s conference papers and articles, I will investigate
the relatively obscure history of this colonial artifact while exploring the
use of imitation as part of the repertoire of colonial governance.
Subject
General Arts and Humanities,Sociology and Political Science,Anthropology,Cultural Studies
Cited by
5 articles.
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