Caregiving on the periphery : historical perspectives on nursing and midwifery in Canada / edited by Myra Rutherdale.
- Date:
- 2010
- Books
About this work
Publication/Creation
Montreal : McGill-Queen's University Press, 2010.
Physical description
viii, 376 pages : illustrations, portraits.
Contributors
Bibliographic information
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents
"Monthly" nurses, "sick" nurses, and midwives: working-class caregivers in Toronto, 1830-91 -- Catching babies and delivering the dead: midwives and undertakers in Mennonite settlement communities -- On the edge of empire: the working life of Myra (Grimsley) Bennett -- From the streets of Toronto to the Northwest rebellion: Hannah Grier Coome's call to duty -- Part of a large company of white folk: making 'whiteness,' marking gender in the letters of nurse Margaret Butcher -- Nursing in the North and writing for the South: the work and travels of Amy Wilson -- Training Aboriginal nurses: the Indian health services in Northwestern Canada, 1939-75 -- Conflict and resistance to paternalism: nursing with the Grenfell Mission Stations in Newfoundland and Labrador, 1939-81 -- A negotiated process: outpost nursing under the Red cross in Ontario, 1922-84 -- Caring, curing, and socialization: the ambiguities of nursing in Northern Saskatchewan, 1944-57 -- Baby rats and Canada's food rules: nurses as educators in Northern communities.
Languages
Where to find it
Location Status History of MedicineCBX.54Open shelves
Permanent link
Identifiers
ISBN
- 9780773536753
- 0773536752
- 9780773536760
- 0773536760