Literature DB >> 31208481

Psychiatry's 'Others'? Rethinking the Professional Self-Fashioning of British Mental Nurses c. 1900-20.

Mark Neuendorf.   

Abstract

Despite facing manifold social and educational barriers, British asylum nurses across the long nineteenth century articulated distinctive professional identities as a means of leveraging their position in the medical hierarchy. This article draws upon a corpus of previously unattributed contributions to the Asylum News (1897-1919) - one of the first journals produced for the edification of asylum workers - to illustrate the diversity of medical personae developed and disseminated by these employees in the Edwardian era. Through scientific and creative works, nurses engaged with the pressing social and medical debates of the day, in the process exposing a heterogeneous intellectual culture. Moreover, as their writings attest, for some ambitious nurses these pretensions to intellectual authority prompted claims for medical autonomy, driving agitation on the hospital wards. The article thus strengthens claims for the 'cultural agency' of asylum workers and offers new insights into the cultural antecedents of professionalisation and trade unionism.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Eugenics; Medical journals; Mental nursing; Professionalisation; Psychotherapy; Trade unionism

Mesh:

Year:  2019        PMID: 31208481      PMCID: PMC7329226          DOI: 10.1017/mdh.2019.28

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Hist        ISSN: 0025-7273            Impact factor:   1.419


  10 in total

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Authors:  A Summers
Journal:  Hist Today       Date:  1989-02

2.  Scientific personae in American psychology: three case studies.

Authors:  Francesca Bordogna
Journal:  Stud Hist Philos Biol Biomed Sci       Date:  2005-03

3.  Gender and professional identity in psychiatric nursing practice in Alberta, Canada, 1930-75.

Authors:  Geertje Boschma; Olive Yonge; Lorraine Mychajlunow
Journal:  Nurs Inq       Date:  2005-12       Impact factor: 2.393

4.  Benevolent theory: moral treatment at the York Retreat.

Authors:  Louis C Charland
Journal:  Hist Psychiatry       Date:  2007-03

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Authors:  J Hallam
Journal:  Nurs Inq       Date:  1998-03       Impact factor: 2.393

6.  The laboratory and the asylum: Francis Walker Mott and the pathological laboratory at London County Council Lunatic Asylum, Claybury, Essex (1895-1916).

Authors:  Tatjana Buklijas
Journal:  Hist Psychiatry       Date:  2017-03-28

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Authors:  F R Adams
Journal:  Br J Sociol       Date:  1969-03

8.  The influence of positivistic thought on nineteenth century asylum nursing.

Authors:  M C Chung; P Nolan
Journal:  J Adv Nurs       Date:  1994-02       Impact factor: 3.187

9.  Physicians and psychics: the Anglo-American medical response to spiritualism, 1870-1890.

Authors:  S E Shortt
Journal:  J Hist Med Allied Sci       Date:  1984-07       Impact factor: 2.088

10.  'Looking as little like patients as persons well could': hypnotism, medicine and the problem of the suggestible subject in late nineteenth-century Britain.

Authors:  Teri Chettiar
Journal:  Med Hist       Date:  2012-07       Impact factor: 1.419

  10 in total

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