Abbreviations ix
Acknowledgments xi
Introduction 1
1. Registers of Violence 27
2. Maria N'koi 61
3. Emergency Time 95
4. Shock Talk and Flywhisks 135
5. A Penal Colony, an Infertility Clinic 167
6. Motion 207
Conclusion. Field Coda and Other Endings 237
Notes 255
Bibliography 309
Index 343
Nancy Rose Hunt is Professor of History at the University of Michigan, and the author of the prizewinning A Colonial Lexicon: Of Birth Ritual, Medicalization, and Mobility in the Congo, also published by Duke University Press.
"Hunt demonstrates how her use of interdisciplinary
methods-archival, oral historical, literary, and ethnographic-and
unconventional materials provides provocative insights into the
colonial history of the Congo." - Elisha P. Renne (Journal of
Interdisciplinary History) "The book’s synthetic range, historical
detail, and conceptual density...make it highly appropriate for
graduate work, and essential in equatorial African studies....an
exemplary venture in medical anthropology and a truly rich set of
resources for those of us engaging such questions in our own
thought and research." - David Eaton (Medical Anthropology
Quarterly) "This is a book that is brimming with tensions:
historiographical, epistemological, sensorial, emotional. It is
alive with them, both in the material that Nancy Rose Hunt uncovers
and in her manner of relaying her subject to the reader." - Richard
C. Keller and Emer Lucey (Somatosphere) "A Nervous State is an
extraordinary book. Its empirical richness is obvious-the number
and variety of different sources that Hunt has drawn upon, and the
attention that she has paid to all these sources. Diaries and
colonial archives, Lomongo language pamphlets and school
essays, photographs, epic poems and dances-all of them receive the
same, patient, highly sympathetic, but also questioning,
persistent, and often quietly skeptical, scrutiny. Versions of
events are presented, and new vistas open up, yet this is also a
judicious book where the conclusions never push beyond what the
evidence will support." - Joe Trapido (Somatosphere) "Nancy Rose
Hunt’s latest book beats, breathes, quivers and unsettles. Her
writing brims with the curiosity and rigour that evidently fuels
her meticulous tracing of neglected archival materials. Also
palpable are the insight and sensitivity that enable her to
encapsulate both the changing machinations of a biopolitical state,
and the ‘therapeutic insurgencies’ of ordinary Congolese. However,
it is Hunt’s attention to sensation and to perception, what one
might call her scholarly synaesthesia-her ability to read the
archives with an attentive ear, to read ‘dynamics of combat
through acoustics of hushed silence and sadistic
laughter,' for example-that renders her work so compelling for an
anthropologist of Equateur and of the senses." - Lys
Alcayna-Stevens (Somatosphere) "The interpretation in this splendid
work is a decisive contribution to understanding the jumble of
desires, interests, discourses and images in the colonial and
post-colonial history of this country, as well as the psychic life
of its history." - Roberto Beneduce (Journal of Asian and African
Studies) "A Nervous State provides a complex history of Colonial
Congo; it is a huge contribution to African Studies and
anthropology." - Charles Tshimanga (International Journal of
African Historical Studies) "A Nervous State is certainly one of
the most elegant books I have seen over the last years and an
impressive attempt at entangling, and at discussing entangled,
narratives. . . . This book is certainly 'a must' for everyone
engaging with the history of communities under colonial rule,
especially for Central Africa, but also beyond." - Alexander Keese
(Social History) "The interpretation in this splendid work is a
decisive contribution to understanding the jumble of desires,
interests, discourses and images in the colonial and post-colonial
history of this country, as well as the psychic life of its
history." - Roberto Beneduce (Journal of Asian and African Studies)
"Hunt provides a bricolage of archives, memories, and traces that
is more than the sum of its parts. In so doing, she demonstrates in
this deeply researched and assiduously analyzed work that the
history of colonial Congo is much more than the haunted legacy of
its violent inception."
- Matthew M. Heaton (American Historical Review) "In
contrast to much popular work on the Congo, this book rejects using
catastrophe and crisis as the main narratives to order Congolese
history. Without denying the violence of Leopold II’s regime and
the Belgian colonial state, this study provides a much-needed sense
of the diverse narratives of healing, anxiety, and opportunity that
emerged in the decades following the end of the brutal reign of
concessionary companies in the northwestern province of
Equateur. . . . A Nervous State will take its place
among the best works on African social and cultural history for
years to come." - Jeremy Rich (Journal of Social History) “Nancy
Rose Hunt’s A Nervous State represents a pioneering work in African
history, which will surely become a staple in advancing new
frontiers for other narratives in the continent’s history.” - Ben
Weiss (African Studies Review)
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