Exploring the charged topic of black health under slavery, Sharla Fett
reveals how herbalism, conjuring, midwifery, and other African American
healing practices became arts of resistance in the antebellum South.
Fett shows how enslaved men and women drew on African precedents to
develop a view of health and healing that was distinctly at odds with
slaveholders' property concerns. While white slaveowners narrowly
defined slave health in terms of "soundness" for labor, slaves embraced
a relational view of health that was intimately tied to religion and
community. African American healing practices thus not only restored the
body but also provided a formidable weapon against white objectification
of black health.
Enslaved women played a particularly important role in plantation health
culture: they made medicines, cared for the sick, and served as midwives
in both black and white households. Their labor as health workers not
only proved essential to plantation production but also gave them a
basis of authority within enslaved communities. Not surprisingly,
conflicts frequently arose between slave doctoring women and the whites
who attempted to supervise their work, as did conflicts related to
feigned illness, poisoning threats, and African-based religious
practices. By examining the deeply contentious dynamics of plantation
healing, Fett sheds new light on the broader power relations of
antebellum American slavery.