Starving on a Full Stomach: Hunger and the Triumph of Cultural Racism in Modern South Africa. (Reviews).Starving on a Full Stomach: Hunger and the Triumph of Cultural Racism in Modern South Africa South Africa, Afrikaans Suid-Afrika, officially Republic of South Africa, republic (2005 est. pop. 44,344,000), 471,442 sq mi (1,221,037 sq km), S Africa. . By Diana Wylie (Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 2001. xiv plus 319 pp. $55.00/cloth $18.50/paper). Measured in terms of the distribution of household income, South Africa has had, and continues to have, among the greatest disparity between wealthy and poor anywhere in the contemporary world. Among black South Africans This is a list of notable South Africans with Wikipedia articles. Academics, Medical and Scientists
cot death, crib death, SIDS, sudden infant death syndrome ; alcoholism, broken families, sexual violence; extraordinarily uneven and usually woefully woe·ful also wo·ful adj. 1. Affected by or full of woe; mournful. 2. Causing or involving woe. 3. Deplorably bad or wretched: deficient access to healthcare. Three quarters of poor live in rural areas. Most recently South Africa faces among the world's worst HIV/AIDS HIV/AIDS Human Immunodeficiency Virus/Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome crisis, with infection rates in parts of the country reaching a staggering thirty per cent of the population. Starving on a Full Stomach provides many useful insights on the politics of poverty over nearly two centuries of historical change. Wylie is interested less in the economics of poverty but, rather, in the tangled history of how people defined what it meant to be poor, hungry, and sick. Wylie is particularly concerned with the concepts and percepts of people in positions of power and authority, bureaucrats and specialists, and the ways in which hunger and sickness came to be constituted as a problem deserving of state action or inaction. This, then, is primarily a cultural history of power and representation over matters of life and death, the role of race in the making of a catastrophe. Divided into seven chapters and four parts, Starving on a Full Stomach begins with a brief discussion of diet and hunger in the late precolonial pre·co·lo·ni·al or pre-co·lo·ni·al adj. Of, relating to, or being the period of time before colonization of a region or territory. and early colonial eras, in the period before systemic poverty and widespread destitution des·ti·tu·tion n. 1. Extreme want of resources or the means of subsistence; complete poverty. 2. A deprivation or lack; a deficiency. Noun 1. . Here the data are tantalizing tan·ta·lize tr.v. tan·ta·lized, tan·ta·liz·ing, tan·ta·liz·es To excite (another) by exposing something desirable while keeping it out of reach. and incomplete. We know, for example, that much of South Africa is prone to drought. We know also that the agricultural cycle The Agricultural cycle refers to the annual activitites related to the growth and harvest of a crop. This includes loosening the soil, seeding, special watering, moving plants when they grow bigger, and harvesting, among other activities. included lean months when people worried about the rains and wondered if this would be a year of plenty or scarcity. Inexplicably, Wylie does not discuss the early and widespread adoption of maize, an American crop, which had and continues to have extraordinary implications for people's health. Particularly as other sources of protein declined in the colonial period, dependence on maize quite literally created a situation in which children starved on a full stomach. Greater attention to the agricultural history of the precolonial era might have offered important clues to understanding the political economy of maize that Wyli e examines in later chapters. Wylie is on better footing when she analyzes the twentieth century when systemic poverty and widespread malnutrition came to characterize large areas of the country. Starving on a Full Stomach focuses especially on three issues: the early definition of the causes of malnutrition within the context of a paternalistic pa·ter·nal·ism n. A policy or practice of treating or governing people in a fatherly manner, especially by providing for their needs without giving them rights or responsibilities. state; the increasing ascendency of scientific and social scientific expertise; and, finally, the ways in which the state intervened or decided against intervening in African communities. In each case Wylie usefully explores the ways in which racial ideology shaped and reshaped the production of knowledge and state policy. Wylie, for example, points out how ideas about race--some crude, others seemingly quite sophisticated--blinded people from developing a more complex understanding of social problems such as malnutrition, infant mortality (hardware) infant mortality - It is common lore among hackers (and in the electronics industry at large) that the chances of sudden hardware failure drop off exponentially with a machine's time since first use (that is, until the relatively distant time at which enough mechanical , and tuberculosis. She ends by pointing out just how centrally important science came to be in the creation of a racist authoritarian state. Over the past few years historians have begun writing the history of development, particularly in the period after the end of the Second World War. Starving on a Full Stomach is principally intended for historians of South Africa. However the book also should be read as a contribution to the emerging literature on how people and institutions come to define others as poor, as objects of science, as worthy or unworthy of help. |
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