“In this riveting account, Guillaume Lachenal discovers that French doctors seeking police powers and administrative control in colonial Cameroon did not lead to a health utopia, nor did these arrangements reverse decades of demographic decline in the battered colony. What they got was their own transformation into colonial governors. A superb translation of a gifted scholar and stylist, <i>The Doctor Who Would Be King</i> is as alive as any ethnography to social life in poorly known but much roiled parts of the French empire that once circled the globe.” - Paul Farmer, author of (Fevers, Feuds, and Diamonds: Ebola and the Ravages of History) "An absorbing . . . account of a French colonial doctor who was handed absolute political control of an African territory the size of Switzerland in the years 1939-44. . . . It is impossible not to feel the presence of Joseph Conrad’s tale of lordly isolation and madness. It is as if, by assembling this story from archival fragments and the oral accounts of present-day residents, Mr. Lachenal is seeking to bring Dr. David back to our metropolitan gaze in much the way Conrad’s Marlow sought to bring Kurtz back from the jungle." - Tunku Varadarajan (Wall Street Journal) “[Lachenal] leaves us at a crossroads, torn as we are today between the WHO’s proclamations about the advent of global health and the disenchantment caused by emerging microbes and the worsening of inequalities. Depending on whether one reads <i>The Doctor Who Would Be King</i> as a novel . . . or as an essay on contemporary biopolitics, the reader will come out of it reinvigorated or shaken, but not unscathed.” - Anne Marie Moulin (L'Histoire) “[<i>The Doctor Who Would Be King</i>] is an expansive and masterful project whose major contributions are to the history of French colonialism and to historical research methodologies more broadly. . . . Readers . . . will enjoy the ride.” - Caitlin Barker (H-Sci-Med-Tech, H-Net Reviews) “[Lachenal’s] investigation, in which dreams of grandeur, violence, and the tragedy of power are intertwined, is as fascinating as it is disturbing.” - Laurent Lemire (L'Obs) <p>"<i>The Doctor Who Would Be King </i>is a beautifully written, engrossing book that analyzes the career of a French colonial doctor in both Central Africa and Polynesia but also reflects on the thrills and pitfalls of historical research, the instability of historical narratives, and how traces of the past live on in the present. ... This superb book will be of interest to wide-ranging audiences, including historians of medicine, Africa, Polynesia, European empire, and beyond."</p> - Sarah Runcie (Isis)
Part I. The Mandated Territory of Cameroon, 1939–1944
1. A Showcase for Colonial Humanism 17
2. An Archipelago of Camps 22
3. Madame Ateba 26
4. Advocating for a Regime of Exception 31
5. A French Dream 36
6. Haut-Nyong Must Be Saved 40
7. Lessons in Medical Administration 45
8. Paradise: A Guided Tour (December 2013) 52
9. A Real-Life Experiment 58
10. The Invisible Men 63
11. Social Medicine, French-Style 69
12. Life Has Returned 75
13. Colonel David Will Become a General 84
14. The Missionaries' Nightmare 92
15. The Dark Waters of the Haut-Nyong 95
16. Rubber for the Emperor 100
17. "Here We Are the Masters" 106
18. Koch! Koch! 111
Part II. The French Protectorate of Wallis and Futuna, 1933–1938
19. King David 125
20. Uvea, Desert Island 129
21. Chronicles of the Golden Age 140
22. I te Temi o Tavite (In the Time of David) 153
23. Doctor Machete 160
24. Becoming King, Part I: Coup d'État at the Dispensary 165
25. Becoming King, Part II: The Wallisian Art of Governing 172
26. Becoming King, Part III: Kicking Custom to the Curb 178
27. Te Hau Tavite 183
28. Tavite Lea Tahi (David-Only-Speaks-Once) 190
29. Doctor Disaster 198
Part III. Epilogues
30. Afelika (Africa) 215
31. Dachau, Indochina 223
32. The Light Riots 232
Afterword: Global Health Utopias from David to COVID-19 238
Acknowledgments 245
Notes 249
Index 293
Produktdetaljer
Biografisk notat
Guillaume Lachenal is Professor in History of Science, mÉdialab, Sciences Po, Paris and author of The Lomidine Files: The Untold Story of a Medical Disaster in Colonial Africa.Cheryl Smeall is an independent scholar and translator.