This volume explores medical women as a global phenomenon during the long nineteenth century. The volume considers, firstly, how especially British medical women travelled internationally to treat patients who, for reasons of religious, cultural, or social beliefs, were reluctant to seek treatment from male doctors. In this instance, missionary zeal was balanced with concern for womens health and welfare. Secondly, the volume includes texts written by those who qualified as medical women and practised either in their national context or those educated abroad, who then returned home to pursue their careers. The latter makes more widely available works by women of colour, including, for example, the African American woman doctor, Rebecca Lee Crumpler, and Indian female medical practitioner, Rukhmabai. Accompanied by extensive editorial commentary, this title will be of great interest to students of Women's History and the History of Medicine.
This volume explores medical women as a global phenomenon during the long nineteenth century. Accompanied by extensive editorial commentary, this title will be of great interest to students of Women's History and the History of Medicine.
Volume III Global Experiences Volume III - Introduction
1. A Practical
Illustration of Womans Right to Labor; or A Letter from Marie E.
Zakrzewska, M.D. Late of Berlin, Prussia, Caroline H. Dall, ed. (Boston:
Walker, Wise, and Company, 1860), pp. 85-163.
2. Frances Hoggan, Medical
Women for India (Bristol: J.W. Arrowsmith, 1882).
3. Rebecca Lee Crumpler,
M.D., A Book of Medical Discourses In Two Parts (Boston: Cashman, Keating &
Co., 1883), pp. 1-4; pp. 120-144.
4. Emily Ruete, née Princess of Oman and
Zanzibar, Memoirs of an Arabian Princess: An Autobiography (New York: D.
Appleton and Company, 1888), pp. 208-217.
5. Rukhmabai, Indian Child
Marriages: An Appeal to the British Government, New Review, 3:16 (September
1890) pp. 263-269.
6. Mrs Ashley Carus-Wilson (Mary L.G. Petrie, BA, Lond),
The Medical Education of Women (Montreal: John Lovell & Son, 1895).
7. Dr
Kate C. (Hurd) Mead, Reminiscences of Medical Study in Europe, in Daughters
of Aesculapius: Stories Written by Alumnae and Students of the Womans
Medical College of Pennsylvania (Philadelphia: George W. Jacobs and Co.,
1897), pp. 108-122.
8. Photograph of the Taylor Lane Hospital Operating Room
(dated 1899), Dr Matilda A. Evans Collection, National Museum of African
American History and Culture.
9. Dr Lilian Violet Cooper, in Queensland,
1900. A Narrative of Her Past, Together with Biographies of Her Leading Men
(Brisbane: W.H. Wendt & Co., 1900), p.
175. 10. Lillias Hamilton, M.D.,
Something about Medical Work in Afghanistan, London (Royal Free Hospital)
School of Medicine for Women Magazine 18 (January 1901), pp. 726-730.
11.
Lillie E.V. Saville, Notes from my Case-Book, 1902, London Mission, Peking,
London (Royal Free Hospital) School of Medicine for Women Magazine 25 (May
1903), pp. 164-170.
12. Lilian Austen Robinson, Medical Work in Natal,
London (Royal Free Hospital) School of Medicine for Women Magazine, 28 (May
1904), pp. 249-251.
13. Lillie E.V. Saville, Through Siberia, London (Royal
Free Hospital) School of Medicine for Women Magazine, 28 (May 1904), pp.
342-346.
14. Lilian V. Cooper, Australian Experiences, London (Royal Free
Hospital) School of Medicine for Women Magazine, 29 (October 1904), pp.
386-388.
15. Reports of Military Observers Attached to the Armies in
Manchuria during the Russo-Japanese War (October 1 1906) (Washington:
Government Printing Office, 1906), Part II, pp. 107-108, 146-150.
16. Bertha
Van Hoosen, Europe and North Africa, in Petticoat Surgeon (Chicago:
Pellegrini & Cudahy, 1947), pp. 158-172.
17. Elizabeth N. MacBean Ross, A
Lady Doctor in Bakhtiari Land (London: Leonard Parsons, 1921), pp. 9-24,
88-96, 97-108, 154-160.
18. Mrs St Clair Stobart, War and Women, From
Experience in the Balkans and Elsewhere (1913), pp. 62-74, 109-133.
19. Mary
Frances Billington, The Red Cross in War: Womens Part in the Relief of
Suffering (London, New York, and Toronto: Hodder and Stoughton, 1914), pp.
7-13, 181-185.
20. Alice M. Benham, Experiences with a Red Cross Hospital in
Belgium, London (Royal Free Hospital) School of Medicine for Women Magazine,
X:61 (July 1915), pp. 74-79; Index
Dr Claire Brock is Associate Professor in the School of Arts at the University of Leicester, UK. Her research interests are in the history of science and medicine, with a focus on womens place within these domains during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.