War, disability and rehabilitation in Britain : ‘soul of a nation'

Author(s)

    • Anderson, Julie

Bibliographic Information

War, disability and rehabilitation in Britain : ‘soul of a nation'

Julie Anderson

(Cultural history of modern war)

Manchester University Press, 2011

  • : hbk

Other Title

War, disability and rehabilitation in Britain : "soul of a nation"

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Note

Bibliography: p. 217-234

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Through a series of thematic chapters, Julie Anderson explores the nature of injured and disabled bodies before, during and after the Second World War. Beginning at the end of the First World War and finishing with the publication of the Piercy Committee's report in 1956, the book examines medical practice, State support, societal attitudes and cultural meanings surrounding disabled war veterans and civilians. The book focuses on the embodied nature of the rehabilitative process, its gendered nature and the concentration on bodily fitness during the war. Using a series of case studies, this wide-ranging book seeks to understand the processes, methodology and practice of rehabilitation for those injured and disabled in war, and reflect on its adoption in post-war Britain. War, disability and rehabilitation in Britain will interest historians of medicine, war and disability studies. -- .

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements List of illustrations List of tables Introduction 1. Unfortunates: Disability 1900-39 2. Attitude: Disabled ex-servicemen after the First World War 3. Soul: Rehabilitation in the Second World War 4. Fit: The process of rehabilitation 5. Men: Masculinity and rehabilitation 6. Revealed: Women and rehabilitation 7. Nation: Rehabilitation and the state Conclusion Bibliography Index -- .

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