ID | 182841 |
Title Proper | Jar of Shaykhs’ Teeth |
Other Title Information | Medicine, Politics, and the Fragments of History in Kuwait |
Language | ENG |
Author | Goffman, Laura Frances |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | This article examines ʿAbd al-Ilah al-Qinaʿi's early 20th-century melding of local, imperial, and transoceanic health practices alongside his 21st-century reemergence as a protonational Kuwaiti doctor. In the early 20th century, geographically and ideologically expansive horizons of health care fostered the emergence of hybrid medical practices. Facilitated by his access to multiple medical spheres and his proximity to Kuwait's rulers, ʿAbd al-Ilah was uniquely positioned to meet the demands of health-seeking consumers. In the 21st century, Kuwaitis' search for a national history that naturalizes claims to citizenship has resulted in ʿAbd al-Ilah's new designation as Kuwait's first doctor. Both processes—the interplay between local cultures of health and emergent institutions and the imagining of medical history as a nativist teleology—demonstrate how health-seeking and history-writing efforts of a range of historical actors have placed medicine at the center of politics in Kuwait. |
`In' analytical Note | International Journal of Middle East Studies Vol. 53, No.4; Nov 2021: p.589 - 603 |
Journal Source | International Journal of Middle East Studies 2021-12 53, 4 |
Key Words | Politics ; Kuwait ; Medicine ; History |