Routledge Handbook on the Global History of Nursing 1st Edition by Patricia DAntonio, Julie Fairman, Jean Whelan – Ebook PDF Instant Download/Delivery. 0415594278, 9780415594271
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Product details:
ISBN 10: 0415594278
ISBN 13: 9780415594271
Author: Patricia D’Antonio, Julie A. Fairman, Jean C. Whelan
Routledge Handbook on the Global History of Nursing 1st Table of contents:
Part 1 New directions in the global history of nursing
1 American nurses in colonial settings: Imperial power at the bedside
Background
American imperialism – oxymoron, historical anomaly, or natural progression?
More inclusive approaches to American imperialism
Public health in colonial context
Conclusion
Notes
2 Wartime nursing and power
Gender as power
War as power
Nursing as power
Notes
Bibliography
Part 2 New methodological approaches in the history of nursing
3 Nurses and nursing in literary and cultural studies
Cultural studies and historiography
The twentieth century: conflict and competing narratives of ambiguity, agency, and autonomy
As seen on TV
Where are nurse writers?
Notes
4 Commemorating Canadian nurse casualties during and after the First World War: Nurses’ perspective
Llandovery Castle, Edith Cavell and the propaganda value of dead nurses
The memorial in Parliament, 1926
Vancouver Memorial Window: A soldier among soldiers
Nurses and the National Cenotaph
A belated acknowledgement: Recent depictions of military nurses
Conclusion
Notes
5 Searching for connectivity: Using historical methods and social network analysis to uncover new discoveries in community organizing
An introduction to social network analysis
Merging SNA and historical methods
SNA limitations
SNA applied to the early history of the Starr Centre
Starr Centre: Historical background
Defining organizational ties and determining meaning
Analyzing the structure of the Starr Centre
Discussion
Consideration for future users
Conclusion
Notes
Part 3 The politics of nursing knowledge
6 “Intelligent interest in their own affairs”: The First World War, The British Journal of Nursing and the pursuit of nursing knowledge
The struggle for professionalization and the advent of The British Journal of Nursing
Military medicine during the First World War
Nursing and the reception of medical knowledge
Medical writings in nursing journals
Medical authors
Nurse-authors
Nursing textbooks and the development of new knowledge
Nursing knowledge and medical controversy
Conclusion
Notes
7 Engendering health: Pronatalist politics and the history of nursing and midwifery in colonial Senegal, 1914–1967
Colonial intermediaries and the construction of colonial rule
From household to hospital
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Primary sources
Secondary sources
8 Windsor’s Metropolitan Demonstration School and the reform of nursing education in Canada, 1944–1970
“Can nurses train in 25 months?” Mid-century innovation in North American nursing education
A New Deal for nurses
The Windsor connection
The New Deal demonstrated
The school and the scandal: Transgressions of nursing’s New Deal
The CNA Demonstration School and educational innovation after 1952
Notes
9 Conflicting Christian and scientific nursing concepts in West Germany, 1945–1970
The dominance of the sisterhood principle
Starting point: The Agnes Karll Association and the conception of “good” nursing
The radical changes of the 1960s: The scientification of nursing
Nursing reform and the scientification of the social sphere
Notes
Part 4 Nursing and the “practice turn”
10 Protestant nursing care in germany in the 19th century: Concepts and social practice
Nursing care in 19th-century Germany
Norms and regulations
Training
Daily nursing routine
Care of the soul
Terminal care
Conclusion
Notes
11 Agentes de Enlace: Nursing professionalization and public health in 1940s and 1950s Argentina
Nursing professionalization in Argentina
Physicians’ perceptions of nurses
The pace of professionalization
Peronism and nursing
The nurse as public health liaison
Conclusion
Notes
12 A Mission to nurse: The mission hospital’s role in the development of nursing in South Africa c.1948–1975
Background
The institution of apartheid
Nursing in South Africa: The colonial context (1891–1948)
The evolution of nursing under apartheid
Mission hospital development
African nurse training by mission hospitals
End of an era
Conclusion
Notes
13 Nursing and the “hearts and minds” campaign, 1948–1958: The Malayan Emergency
Situating post-war Malaya in the historiography of colonial nursing
Nursing and the “hearts and minds” campaign
The Malayan Emergency – a crisis in care
A call for help: The military, the Red Cross, St John’s Ambulance Brigade, and the World Health Organization
Discussion
Notes
14 Community mental health post-1950: Reconsidering nurses’ and consumers’ identity
Mental health historiography through the lens of nurses and patients
New historiography on community mental health
Patient engagement with community mental health work
Pioneer House
An alliance of political activists and pragmatists
Conclusion
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