abstract: The Female Patient: American Women Writers Narrating Medicine and Psychology 1890-1930 considers how American women writers, including Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Zelda Fitzgerald, Sarah Orne Jewett, Edith Wharton, and Gertrude Stein, use the novel form to examine medical culture during and after the turn of the 20th century. These authors insert the viewpoint of the woman patient, I argue, to expose problematics of gendered medical relationships and women’s roles in medicine, as well as the complexities of the pre-Freudian medical environment. Issues such as categorizing and portrayal of mental illness, control and perception of the patient through treatment, women's alternative medical practices, addiction, and the immigrant and m...
In this research paper, I intend to focus on Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s The Yellow Wallpaper (1892) ...
For my honors thesis, I discuss the history of women in American medicine during the late nineteenth...
Women have traditionally been expected to tend the sick as part of their domestic duties; yet throug...
In recent years, illness narratives have risen in popularity. Women’s medical narratives in particul...
Focusing on late nineteenth-century American narrative fiction from 1892-1915, “The Gendered Subject...
This dissertation focuses on constructions of female authorship in selected prose narratives of four...
This thesis is an examination of the history of mental health treatment for women in the 19th centur...
Title from PDF of title page (University of Missouri--Columbia, viewed on July 30, 2013).The entire ...
Sickly Sentimentalism: Pathology and Sympathy in American Women’s Literature, 1866-1900 examines the...
This dissertation examines writing as a therapoetic practice in late nineteenth-century American lit...
This dissertation examines literary and medical texts from throughout the nineteenth and early twent...
This thesis attempts to prove that the diagnosing and treatment of mental illness in Victorian Anglo...
Homeopathy, one of the most well-known forms of alternative medicine, first rose to popularity durin...
Since Elaine Showalter’s publication of The Female Malady in 1985, various scholars have addressed t...
In this dissertation I analyze Victorian gynecology and literature and argue that texts in both of t...
In this research paper, I intend to focus on Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s The Yellow Wallpaper (1892) ...
For my honors thesis, I discuss the history of women in American medicine during the late nineteenth...
Women have traditionally been expected to tend the sick as part of their domestic duties; yet throug...
In recent years, illness narratives have risen in popularity. Women’s medical narratives in particul...
Focusing on late nineteenth-century American narrative fiction from 1892-1915, “The Gendered Subject...
This dissertation focuses on constructions of female authorship in selected prose narratives of four...
This thesis is an examination of the history of mental health treatment for women in the 19th centur...
Title from PDF of title page (University of Missouri--Columbia, viewed on July 30, 2013).The entire ...
Sickly Sentimentalism: Pathology and Sympathy in American Women’s Literature, 1866-1900 examines the...
This dissertation examines writing as a therapoetic practice in late nineteenth-century American lit...
This dissertation examines literary and medical texts from throughout the nineteenth and early twent...
This thesis attempts to prove that the diagnosing and treatment of mental illness in Victorian Anglo...
Homeopathy, one of the most well-known forms of alternative medicine, first rose to popularity durin...
Since Elaine Showalter’s publication of The Female Malady in 1985, various scholars have addressed t...
In this dissertation I analyze Victorian gynecology and literature and argue that texts in both of t...
In this research paper, I intend to focus on Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s The Yellow Wallpaper (1892) ...
For my honors thesis, I discuss the history of women in American medicine during the late nineteenth...
Women have traditionally been expected to tend the sick as part of their domestic duties; yet throug...