For enslaved and newly freed African Americans, attaining freedom
and citizenship without health for themselves and their families
would have been an empty victory. Even before emancipation, African
Americans recognized that control of their bodies was a critical
battleground in their struggle for autonomy, and they devised
strategies to retain at least some of that control. In
Doctoring
Freedom, Gretchen Long tells the stories of African Americans
who fought for access to both medical care and medical education,
showing the important relationship between medical practice and
political identity.
Working closely with antebellum medical journals, planters'
diaries, agricultural publications, letters from wounded African
American soldiers, WPA narratives, and military and Freedmen's
Bureau reports, Long traces African Americans' political acts to
secure medical care: their organizing mutual-aid societies, their
petitions to the federal government, and, as a last resort, their
founding of their own medical schools, hospitals, and professional
organizations. She also illuminates work of the earliest generation
of black physicians, whose adult lives spanned both slavery and
freedom. For African Americans, Long argues, claiming rights as
both patients and practitioners was a political and highly charged
act in both slavery and emancipation.