Social Science and Medicine
Volume 42, Issue 2, 1996, Pages 185-197

The industrial Panopticon: Mining and the medical construction of migrant African labour in South Africa, 1900-1950 (Article)

Butchart A.*
  • a University of South Africa, Health Psychology Unit, NCOH, P.O. Box 4788, Johannesburg 2000, South Africa

Abstract

Derived from a marxist/liberal humanist view of power, conventional critiques of the South African gold mining industry's medical apparatus see only its power to repress and negate the true bodily attributes and authentic person of the African mine worker. In so doing, they ignore the productive capacity of medical practice as a manifestation of what Foucault termed 'disciplinary' power, by which the human body is manufactured and made manageable as an object of medical knowledge and industrial utilization. Accordingly, this paper offers just such a Foucaultian reading of South African mining medicine to demonstrate how it has operated to fabricate the bodies of African miners as visible objects possessed of distinct attributes that provoked particular strategies for their surveillance in health and disease.

Author Keywords

Surveillance Disciplinary power Mining medicine Michel Foucault South Africa

Index Keywords

Review cultural factor mining migrant worker medical practice Gold South Africa human

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-0030067668&doi=10.1016%2f0277-9536%2895%2900085-2&partnerID=40&md5=80d6121393563b3b45d71a8f234a05c9

DOI: 10.1016/0277-9536(95)00085-2
ISSN: 02779536
Cited by: 15
Original Language: English