The army nurse

Storied accounts of nurses’ representations on the battlefield become vital records of personal or communal histories that otherwise may not be voiced or even acknowledged. What we have today is a fairly accurate account of the harsh realities nurses endured at the battlefield and how these horrific...

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Main Author: Mariella Scerri
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University College of Medical Sciences 2020-06-01
Series:Research and Humanities in Medical Education
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.rhime.in/ojs/index.php/rhime/article/view/273
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author Mariella Scerri
author_facet Mariella Scerri
author_sort Mariella Scerri
collection DOAJ
description Storied accounts of nurses’ representations on the battlefield become vital records of personal or communal histories that otherwise may not be voiced or even acknowledged. What we have today is a fairly accurate account of the harsh realities nurses endured at the battlefield and how these horrific situations shaped them as nurses who would act as role models in the brink of death. While women’s writing about war has received much critical attention that has established its authenticity as witness to war, scant attention has been paid to how women see the trauma of nursing at the frontline and how it influences the narrative. The scope of this article is to understand the connections between nurses’ narratives from the First World War and Vietnam. It tries to elicit common elements in how war is seen and consequently to the relationship between seeing and bearing witness to wars.
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spelling doaj.art-ad85549bacc84f53aa9ebfd93b3af8692022-12-22T02:11:19ZengUniversity College of Medical SciencesResearch and Humanities in Medical Education2350-05652020-06-017127135273The army nurseMariella Scerri0University of MaltaStoried accounts of nurses’ representations on the battlefield become vital records of personal or communal histories that otherwise may not be voiced or even acknowledged. What we have today is a fairly accurate account of the harsh realities nurses endured at the battlefield and how these horrific situations shaped them as nurses who would act as role models in the brink of death. While women’s writing about war has received much critical attention that has established its authenticity as witness to war, scant attention has been paid to how women see the trauma of nursing at the frontline and how it influences the narrative. The scope of this article is to understand the connections between nurses’ narratives from the First World War and Vietnam. It tries to elicit common elements in how war is seen and consequently to the relationship between seeing and bearing witness to wars.https://www.rhime.in/ojs/index.php/rhime/article/view/273army nursinggenderhealth humanitiesliteraturenursingwar
spellingShingle Mariella Scerri
The army nurse
Research and Humanities in Medical Education
army nursing
gender
health humanities
literature
nursing
war
title The army nurse
title_full The army nurse
title_fullStr The army nurse
title_full_unstemmed The army nurse
title_short The army nurse
title_sort army nurse
topic army nursing
gender
health humanities
literature
nursing
war
url https://www.rhime.in/ojs/index.php/rhime/article/view/273
work_keys_str_mv AT mariellascerri thearmynurse
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