Clement Masakure
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Introduction
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This chapter introduces the central thesis, supporting arguments, sources, methods and the significance of the work to nursing history in colonial and post-colonial societies in particular and global nursing history in general. The analysis around nurses’ daily experiences is framed around questions that focus on the centrality of African nurses in the provision of care during the period under study, and understanding as well as disentangling the complex relations between nurses themselves as well as between nurses and their superiors. It proffers the need to move beyond hospitals, exploring what the profession offered to those who practised it and societal expectations of nurses. The chapter highlights the need to appreciate that nurses’ struggles – within and outside clinical spaces – were part of the broader national struggles during the period under study. In the process, the chapter engages literature on colonial and post-colonial nursing history that has not only examined the various ways in which nursing and hospitals became sites of race, class and gender and ethnic struggles, but also focused on nurses who occupied the lower rungs of the profession, giving voice to those silenced in nursing historiography. Oral, archival and secondary material constitute the evidentiary base for the reconstruction of nursing history in Zimbabwe.

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