Clement Masakure
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The Africanisation of Rhodesia’s clinical spaces and an anatomy of everyday work in hospitals, 1960–70
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The chapter centres on the historical enquiry of the Africanisation of nursing services in Southern Rhodesia in the wake of the opening up of SRN training to young African women. Besides training SRNs, the government began appointing African nursing tutors and sisters into more senior positions. The chapter argues that as much as this gesture began the gradual dismantling of the industrial colour-bar system that had denied Africans positions of power within the Civil Service, racism within hospitals continued. In fact the hospital remained quintessentially a colonial space – as the hierarchy of authority and the deployment of power within clinical spaces replicated colonial race and class relations. The chapter argues that in such a hostile environment, African nurses carved out a niche for themselves by making workspaces (hospitals) their own. At the same time, nurses’ testimonies suggest that nursing practice within colonial hospitals gave African women an opportunity to reshape cultural perceptions of nursing and the care economy in colonial Zimbabwe.

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