The Nurse, the Veteran, and the Female Scientist: Dependency and Separation

Autor: Kirsten Twelbeck
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2015
Předmět:
Cultural Studies
History
lcsh:United States
Literature and Literary Theory
Sociology and Political Science
Abraham Lincoln
media_common.quotation_subject
Geography
Planning and Development

Psychological intervention
lcsh:HM401-1281
Susan B. Anthony
adaptation
Francis Galton
Henry Ward Beecher
lcsh:History America
nurses
Owen Wister
Elizabeth Cady Stanton
Nursing
Reading (process)
John Bennitt
Civil War
Sociology
veterans
feminism (and science)
lcsh:E-F
media_common
masculinities
Mary Bradley Lane
Gender relations
Louisa May Alcott
Silas Weir Mitchell
Frank L. Ward
Adventure
Emotional crisis
Negotiation
Spanish Civil War
amputations
lcsh:Sociology (General)
lcsh:E151-889
Matilda Gage
Reconstruction
Clara Barton
“Mother” Bickerdyke
Social Sciences (miscellaneous)
Period (music)
Alonzo F. Hill
Zdroj: European Journal of American Studies, Vol 10, Iss 1 (2015)
ISSN: 1991-9336
Popis: The discourse that emerged around the female nurses who served in American Civil War hospitals has been a major topic in the debate about nineteenth-century gender relations. What remains obscure, however, is the genesis of this figure during the postwar period and its influence on late nineteenth-century gender relations. Focusing on the post-1865 period as a time of emotional crisis and mental adaptation (Leslie Butler), this article seeks to analyze and assess the gendered tensions that emerged when the process of “binding up the nation’s wounds” (Abraham Lincoln) became a more permanent occupation than was commonly anticipated. By reading Louisa May Alcott’s Hospital Sketches, Silas Weir Mitchell’s “The Case of George Dedlow,” Alonzo F. Hill’s John Smith’s Funny Adventures on a Crutch, and Mary Bradley Lane’s Mizora as contributions to and critical interventions into official veteran memorial culture, this article sheds light on the gendered dimension of the Reconstruction adaptation and negotiation process, and explains why the concept of the female nurse played a crucial role in this development.
Databáze: OpenAIRE