Taking wartime nurses – and post-war nursing – seriously makes one think more politically about the wounds endured in wartime and what counts as a wartime ‘wound’. Thinking about wounds and the wounded, in turn, reveals how war-waging officials, and militarizers more generally, have tried in the past, and today still try, to shrink citizens’ awareness of militarism’s negative consequences. Nursing, nurses, wounds, and the wounded each continues to be gendered, influencing the workings of both masculinities and femininities in past and current wartimes and post-war politics. Feminist analysts have expanded the ‘political’ and multiplied ‘political thinkers’. Failing to absorb these feminist theoretical insights fosters the trivialization of ...
As nations have developed increasingly sophisticated weaponry with which to harm theirs enemies, med...
Key words: conflict and nursing; nurses ’ ethical responsibility; nurses ’ humanitarian work; nurses...
Stage 1, a self-completed questionnaire survey (n=266 nurses), found no statistically significant re...
Foreign Bodies: Military Medicine, Modernism and Melodrama traces how representations of warfare in ...
From the Crimean War in 1853 to the Vietnam War in 1959 American Military nurses developed fictive c...
Covers the wartime experiences of the female American military nurses who served in World War II, in...
Negotiating nursing explores how the Queen Alexandra's Imperial Military Nursing Service (Q.A.s...
On Remembrance Day, all efforts are spent to remember those who fell in the various wars that have t...
As we can see in war areas today, health care systems and especially hospitals can be considered as ...
Scholars and theorists who discuss the relationship between gender and war agree that the divide bet...
The First World War was the first 'total war'. Its industrial weaponry damaged millions of men and d...
In World War II, at a small RAF hospital in the south of England, plastic surgeon Archibald McIndoe ...
In spite of the hardships of World War I, women volunteered as nurses out of patriotism and because ...
Ph.D. University of Hawaii at Manoa 2014.Includes bibliographical references.This dissertation exami...
UnrestrictedWorld War I and World War II powerfully influenced American cultural fears and fantasies...
As nations have developed increasingly sophisticated weaponry with which to harm theirs enemies, med...
Key words: conflict and nursing; nurses ’ ethical responsibility; nurses ’ humanitarian work; nurses...
Stage 1, a self-completed questionnaire survey (n=266 nurses), found no statistically significant re...
Foreign Bodies: Military Medicine, Modernism and Melodrama traces how representations of warfare in ...
From the Crimean War in 1853 to the Vietnam War in 1959 American Military nurses developed fictive c...
Covers the wartime experiences of the female American military nurses who served in World War II, in...
Negotiating nursing explores how the Queen Alexandra's Imperial Military Nursing Service (Q.A.s...
On Remembrance Day, all efforts are spent to remember those who fell in the various wars that have t...
As we can see in war areas today, health care systems and especially hospitals can be considered as ...
Scholars and theorists who discuss the relationship between gender and war agree that the divide bet...
The First World War was the first 'total war'. Its industrial weaponry damaged millions of men and d...
In World War II, at a small RAF hospital in the south of England, plastic surgeon Archibald McIndoe ...
In spite of the hardships of World War I, women volunteered as nurses out of patriotism and because ...
Ph.D. University of Hawaii at Manoa 2014.Includes bibliographical references.This dissertation exami...
UnrestrictedWorld War I and World War II powerfully influenced American cultural fears and fantasies...
As nations have developed increasingly sophisticated weaponry with which to harm theirs enemies, med...
Key words: conflict and nursing; nurses ’ ethical responsibility; nurses ’ humanitarian work; nurses...
Stage 1, a self-completed questionnaire survey (n=266 nurses), found no statistically significant re...