(Un)equal and defiant to patriarchy: The first female Serbian doctors Draga Ljočić Milošević and Smilja Kostić-Joksić and their place in the society
This paper analyses professional biographies of the first female Serbian doctor Draga Ločić Milošević (1855-1926) and Smilja Kostić-Joksić (1895-1981), a female paediatrician and a professor at the Faculty of Medicine in Belgrade. Although they did not belong to the same generation, thei...
Main Author: | |
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Institute of Ethnography, SASA, Belgrade
2021-01-01
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Series: | Glasnik Etnografskog Instituta SANU |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://www.doiserbia.nb.rs/img/doi/0350-0861/2021/0350-08612102345P.pdf |
Summary: | This paper analyses professional biographies of the first female Serbian
doctor Draga Ločić Milošević (1855-1926) and Smilja Kostić-Joksić
(1895-1981), a female paediatrician and a professor at the Faculty of
Medicine in Belgrade. Although they did not belong to the same generation,
their biographies have so much in common. Similarities are obvious
especially considering their social status and political and intellectual
elite’s attitude towards first educated women. Draga Ločić, the first woman
with diploma in medicine from Zurich University, was not able to find the
job in the state medical institutions after returning to Belgrade. Only
after being persistent and taking additional professional exams she managed
to get position but only as a medical assistant, with twice lower salary
than her male colleagues. She did not manage to achieve equal status until
the end of the professional career. Doctor Draga Ločić was a philanthropist,
feminist and active suffragette. Her professional and educational heiress,
female paediatrician and scientist Smilja Kostić-Joksić, managed to become a
part of the intellectual elite but to a limited extend. Before the beginning
of World War II she had an assistant status and was a woman with the highest
academic status in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia. In the socialist Yugoslavia
due to ideological disagreements, she was dismissed from the University.
These two biographies are evident examples how concept of public patriarchy
functions in practice. Public patriarchy is not conditioned with any
chronological nor ideological context but instead, it is always present and
dominant within the discourse of women’s position in the society. |
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ISSN: | 0350-0861 2334-8259 |