Gender and Nation Building in the Middle East: The Political Economy of Health from Mandate Palestine to Refugee Camps in Jordan

Gender and Nation Building in the Middle East: The Political Economy of Health from Mandate Palestine to Refugee Camps in Jordan

by Elise G. Young
Gender and Nation Building in the Middle East: The Political Economy of Health from Mandate Palestine to Refugee Camps in Jordan

Gender and Nation Building in the Middle East: The Political Economy of Health from Mandate Palestine to Refugee Camps in Jordan

by Elise G. Young

Hardcover

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Overview

From Mandate Palestine to refugee camps in Jordan today, generations of Palestinians have been affected by the reach of the state into their everyday lives. Here Elise Young offers an analysis of the politics of state building in the Middle East, viewed through the lens of health. Young argues that gendered, raced and classed constructions of health, as evidenced in malaria eradication campaigns and the regularization of midwifery, are central to such state building processes. She draws on archival documents to uncover British medical administration and American involvement during the Mandate, and in-depth oral histories of Palestinian women refugees in Jordan. Making a powerful case for an alternative historiography of the region, this book will be invaluable for all those interested in Middle East history and politics, nationalism, gender, public health and refugees.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781848854819
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 11/22/2011
Series: Library of Modern Middle East Studies , #114
Pages: 224
Product dimensions: 5.70(w) x 8.60(h) x 1.00(d)

About the Author

Elise G. Young is a Middle East historian and Professor in the History Department at Westfield State University. She has conducted research in Palestine, Israel, and Jordan, and has written extensively on women and modern nation-state building in those regions. She is the author of Keepers of the History: Women and the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict, an innovative feminist historiography of the war over Palestine.

Table of Contents

PREFACE
• INTRODUCTION
• Approach and Methodology: 'Knowledge' in the Era of the Modern Nation-state
• Feminist Epistemology and Modernization Theory: Transmission of Knowledges
• Epistemology and Oral History Methodology
• Feminist Theory and Middle East Studies
• State of the Field: Research on Jordan
• Chapter Outline
• IMPERIALISM AND HEALTH: POLITICAL IMPLICATIONS OF MALARIA ERADICATION CAMPAIGNS IN PALESTINE AND TRANSJORDAN, 1919-1939
• An Imperial Pursuit: Malaria Eradication and Land Reclamation
• Race, Gender, Class Politics of Malaria Eradication
• The Political Economy of Health and Rehabilitation
• Mighty Reactions and Anti-Malaria Measures: A Testing Ground
• Long Term Effects
• Conclusion
• 3. BETWEEN DAYA AND DOCTOR: A FORMIDABLE ABYSS?
• Dangerous Hags and Sanitized Hovels: Midwifery and Modernity
• Reorganization/Regulation/Specialization
• A Formidable Journey: Midwives in Refugee Camps in Jordan
• Conclusion
• THE CAMP OF RETURN: HEALTH AND PALESTINIAN WOMEN REFUGEES IN JORDAN
• Refugee or Freedom Fighter? Identity Politics and Health in Exile
• The Political Economy of Refugee Health
• Women Talk About Health: Al-Ghurbah, The Disaster
• From Jabal al-Hussein Camp to the Ministry: Poverty/Reproductive Health/Resistance
• Conclusion
• AFTERWORD
• BIBLIOGRAPHY *INDEX

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