TY - JOUR
T1 - Sexually transmitted diseases at the time of Italian colonies
T2 - Historical, ethical and medical implications
AU - Martini, Mariano
AU - Adawi, Mohammad
AU - Watad, Abdulla
AU - Mahroum, Naim
AU - Tornali, Cristina
AU - Parodi, Alessandra
AU - Bragazzi, Nicola Luigi
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 A. CARBONE Editore. All Rights Reserved.
PY - 2019
Y1 - 2019
N2 - Italian colonialism has peculiar features when compared with other colonialisms. However, as for the other colonialisms, sexual imagery has played a major role also in the history of the Italian colonialism, contributing to forge and shape customs and rituals. Colonial Africa was perceived as a fertile land, prone to invasion and conquest, as its women, lascivious, and ready to be seduced, loved and abandoned, for use and consumption of white men. At the time of Italian colonies, rhetoric depicted African women as women living completely naked, aiming at attracting young soldiers. African women were characterized by a double dimension of exoticism and eroticism. Dualisms such as male/female, Italian/stranger, white/black, north/south, center/suburbs defined the relationship between Italy and its colonies, delineating a real sexual colonialism, full of violence, occasional relations (defined as sciarmuttismo) and relations more uxorio (termed as madamato or madamismo in Eritrea and Ethiopia, and in Lybia). From a medical standpoint, in the Italian colonies sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) were quite widespread and common. Different institutions (“sifilicomio”) for treating prostitutes and concubines suffering from STDs were built: the first “sifilicomio” opened in June 1885. Even though syphilis was endemic in the African continent, medical statistics collected by colonial physicians were rather inaccurate, and the concerns of colonial officers for a decline of protectorate populations due to the spreading of STDs were on one hand exaggerated, on the other not based on scientific evidences. Anyway, based on their ideology, perceptions and personal beliefs, colonial officers introduced “paternalistic” programs. These initiatives, rather than being inspired by medical objectives, were due to concerns over labor shortage potentially impacting on the viability and stability of protectorates and constituted an attempt of “socially engineering” the African continent, interfering with the private sphere. In conclusion, Italian colonialism presents many nuances, which warrant further investigations.
AB - Italian colonialism has peculiar features when compared with other colonialisms. However, as for the other colonialisms, sexual imagery has played a major role also in the history of the Italian colonialism, contributing to forge and shape customs and rituals. Colonial Africa was perceived as a fertile land, prone to invasion and conquest, as its women, lascivious, and ready to be seduced, loved and abandoned, for use and consumption of white men. At the time of Italian colonies, rhetoric depicted African women as women living completely naked, aiming at attracting young soldiers. African women were characterized by a double dimension of exoticism and eroticism. Dualisms such as male/female, Italian/stranger, white/black, north/south, center/suburbs defined the relationship between Italy and its colonies, delineating a real sexual colonialism, full of violence, occasional relations (defined as sciarmuttismo) and relations more uxorio (termed as madamato or madamismo in Eritrea and Ethiopia, and in Lybia). From a medical standpoint, in the Italian colonies sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) were quite widespread and common. Different institutions (“sifilicomio”) for treating prostitutes and concubines suffering from STDs were built: the first “sifilicomio” opened in June 1885. Even though syphilis was endemic in the African continent, medical statistics collected by colonial physicians were rather inaccurate, and the concerns of colonial officers for a decline of protectorate populations due to the spreading of STDs were on one hand exaggerated, on the other not based on scientific evidences. Anyway, based on their ideology, perceptions and personal beliefs, colonial officers introduced “paternalistic” programs. These initiatives, rather than being inspired by medical objectives, were due to concerns over labor shortage potentially impacting on the viability and stability of protectorates and constituted an attempt of “socially engineering” the African continent, interfering with the private sphere. In conclusion, Italian colonialism presents many nuances, which warrant further investigations.
KW - Italian colonialism in Africa
KW - Pathocenosis
KW - Sexual practices
KW - Sexually transmitted diseases
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85063630322&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.19193/0393-6384_2019_2_138
DO - 10.19193/0393-6384_2019_2_138
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AN - SCOPUS:85063630322
SN - 0393-6384
VL - 35
SP - 909
EP - 911
JO - Acta Medica Mediterranea
JF - Acta Medica Mediterranea
IS - 2
ER -