This electronic version has been made available under a Creative Commons (BY-NC-ND) open access license.
Negotiating Nursing explores how the Queen Alexandra’s Imperial Military Nursing Service (Q.A.s) salvaged their soldier-patients within the sensitive gender negotiations of what should and could constitute nursing work and where that work could occur. The book argues that the Q.A.s, an entirely female force during the Second World War, were essential to recovering men from the battlefield and for the war, despite concerns about women’s presence on the frontline. Using personal testimony the book maps the developments in nurses’ work as they created a legitimate space for themselves in war zones and established their position as the expert at the bedside. Yet, despite the acknowledgement of nurses’ vital role in the medical service, their position was gendered. As the women of Britain were returned to the home post-war, it was the military nurses’ womanhood that stymied their considerable skills from being transferred to the new welfare state.
Innehållsförteckning
Introduction: Nursing work and nurses’ space in the Second World War: a gendered construction 1. Salvaging soldiers, comforting men 2. Challenging nursing spaces 3. Nursing presence 4. Negotiating the boundaries of nursing practice 5. Reasserting work, space and gender boundaries at the end of the Second World War Concluding remarks Index
Om författaren
Christine Hallett is Professor of Nursing History at the University of Manchester
Christine Hallett is Reader in Nursing History at the University of Manchester, and Director of the UK Centre for the History of Nursing and Midwifery