To the ends of the earth : women's search for education in medicine

書誌事項

To the ends of the earth : women's search for education in medicine

Thomas Neville Bonner

Harvard University Press, 1992

  • : alk. paper

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注記

Includes bibliographical references (p. [207]-224) and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

In this book Thomas Bonner unveils the dramatic story of women's long struggle to become physicians. Focusing both on international comparisons and on the personal histories of many of the pioneers, their determination and dedication, their setbacks and successes, he shows how European and American women gradually broke through the wall of resistance to women in medicine. In pre-Civil War America, in Tsarist Russia, in Victorian England, special schools of medicine for women were widely established as early as 1850 as a kind of way-station on the road to medical coeducation. Only in Switzerland and France, at first, could women study medicine in classes with men. As a result, hundreds and then thousands of women from Russia, Eastern Europe, England, and the United States enrolled in Swiss or Parisian universities to gain the first-class education that was denied them at home. In all, Bonner shows, at least 10,000 women left their homelands to study medicine in foreign countries before 1914. Coming almost literally from "the ends of the earth", they formed the largest migration of professional women in history. Obstacles loomed large in the paths of these women. Forced to leave their homes, families, and native languages behind, they encountered lingering opposition in even the most progresive countries. Though they gradually gained a measure of acceptance as regular students, in the European schools women were often required to sit behind a curtain at lectures on subjects such as anatomy and gynecology - topics considered too delicate to discuss in their presence. The propriety of women's medical education and the femininity of the women in question were hotly debated in the international press. Even those who managed to graduate faced obstacles to internships, jobs, and training in medical specialties. Based on medical school records, student diaries, and European archives, and written from a comparative viewpoint that has been missing in earlier studies, this book aims to be a comprehensive history of women's medical education in the formative years from 1850 to 1914. In telling the story of female exclusion and creeping progress at the personal, national and international levels. Bonner offers a perspective on 20th century women's achievements in medicine throughout the Western world.

目次

  • Prologue: 1871. Part 1 Women and the study of medicine: women in an economic squeeze
  • why women should not be doctors
  • the American context
  • medical colleges for women
  • segregation and its effects
  • the American achievement. Part 2 Zurich and Paris: rendezvous in Zurich
  • Nadezhda Suslova - the Russian pioneer
  • the legend of Frances Elizabeth Morgan
  • first American - Susan Dimock
  • the Russian crisis
  • the opening of Paris
  • a new beginning. Part 3 The great migration: after the pioneers
  • the opening of Bern
  • Geneva and Lausanne
  • the fight for the internship in France
  • floodtide
  • the end of an era. Part 4 Women, medicine, and revolution in Russia: higher education for women
  • the case of Varvara Kashevarova
  • medical courses for women
  • new setbacks
  • triumphs and chaos. Part 5 Imperial Germany: verboten - the ban on women in medicine
  • the bitter debate
  • the turn of the tide
  • before the war. Part 6 The flight for coeducation in Britain: the Battle of Edinburgh
  • why women should not study with men
  • a women's school in London
  • new openings for women. Part 7 America - triumph and paradox: coeducation and separatism
  • coeducation slowly advances
  • the demise of the women's schools
  • success and disappointment. Epilogue: 1914.

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