Fr. 109.20

The Nurse in Popular Media - Critical Essays

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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The image of the nurse is ubiquitous, both in life and in popular media. One of the earliest instances of nursing and media intersecting is the Edison phonographic recording of Florence Nightingale's voice in 1890. Since then, a parade of nurses, good, bad or otherwise, has appeared on both cinema and television screens. How do we interpret the many different types of nurses--real and fictional, lifelike and distorted, sexual and forbidding--who are so visible in the public consciousness?
This book is a comprehensive collection of unique insights from scholars across the Western world. Essays explore a diversity of nursing types that traverse popular characterizations of nurses from various time periods. The shifting roles of nurses are explored across media, including picture postcards, film, television, journalism and the collection and preservation of uniforms and memorabilia.

List of contents










Table of Contents

Introduction

Barbara Harmes, Meredith A. Harmes and Marcus K. Harmes

Section One: Contested Heroines

Florence on Film: Representations of Nightingale in Cinema and on Television

Richard Bates

"Women bow": The Shifting Power Dynamics Between Nurses and Doctors in Tenko

Mark Aldridge

The Death of Judy Hill: Arctic Nurses, Northern Bush Pilots and the Crash of '72

Travis Hay

A "Complex Personal Problem": Reactions to Voluntary Sterilization in 1960s Media

Caitlin Fendley

M*A*S*H*e*d and Harassed? Nurse Margaret "Hot Lips" Houlihan as Gendered Hate Object

Susan Hopkins

Section Two: Seeking the Ideal

Caps, Capes, Pins and Scrapbooks: Popular Nursing Objects of Remembrance

Jeannine Uribe

Picture Perfect? Postcard Images of Nurses and Nursing, 1890-1920

Julia Hallam

Seeking Standards: Nurses Real and Fictional and Their Professional Standards in British Popular Culture

Marcus K. Harmes, Barbara Harmes and Meredith A. Harmes

In Search of Sympathy: Stereotypes and Stiff Upper Lips in Interwar Nursing

Sarah Chaney

Nostalgia for Spiritual Community Care: Midwifery as Religious Calling in Call the Midwife

Morag Martin

Media Representation of the Nursing Queen Archetype in Its Socio-Cultural Context

Merle Talvik, Taimi Tulva, Ülle Ernits and Kristi Puusepp

Section Three: When Nurses Go Wrong

Not My Nurse: Pessimism in Representations of Nurses in 1970s Cinema

Victoria N. Meyer

Lesbians, Nymphomaniacs, and Enema Specialists: Nurses, Horror, and Agency

Marcus K. Harmes, Meredith A. Harmes and Barbara Harmes

Scary Women: Nurses, Power Relations and Regimes of the Visual

Ronja ­Tripp-Bodola

Eroticizing the Nurse: (Bi/Homo)Sexuality and Monstrosity in Nurse 3D

Tatiana ­Prorokova-Konrad

About the Contributors

Index


About the author










Marcus K. Harmes is a professor at the University of Southern Queensland, Toowoomba, Australia. He researches on British popular culture especially science fiction and horror. The late Barbara Harmes was an academic at the University of Southern Queensland, Toowoomba, Australia. Her research focused on English literature and higher education. Meredith A. Harmes teaches at the University of Southern Queensland, Toowoomba, Australia and has a research background in political science and British political history.

Product details

Assisted by Barbara Harmes (Editor), Marcus K. Harmes (Editor), Meredith A. Harmes (Editor)
Publisher McFarland
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 01.10.2021
 
EAN 9781476684185
ISBN 978-1-4766-8418-5
No. of pages 262
Dimensions 152 mm x 229 mm x 16 mm
Weight 430 g
Subject Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology > Medicine > General

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