Alannah Tomkins
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Domestic nursing by women
Ideals and experiences
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Nurse employers from the late seventeenth to the early nineteenth centuries inhabited a culture which made dogmatic statements about nurse behaviour. This chapter considers the ideal nurse in practical and fictional literature, with a particular focus on the writings of Sarah Trimmer, and her diametric opposite, dubbed here the ‘anti-nurse’, subject to reproach and satire. These templates and assumptions around female nurses serve as a backdrop to the evidence of nursing care, written first in the diaries and letters of patients or their families and then from the perspective of the nurses. Domestic nurses might have been either paid or unpaid. This chapter recognises that it is difficult to retrieve material from the perspective of the paid nurse – women employed to nurse others in their homes left no discernible personal papers – but that we can still learn about the practical and affective aspects of nursing by looking at the letters, diaries, and memoirs of unpaid nurses. The chapter considers the accounts of unmarried women with literary aspirations who nursed their relations and others without direct material reward. Personal and biographical material for literary figures such as Mary Lamb are linked back to the social contexts raised in the chapter to characterise domestic nursing as physically challenging and emotionally harrowing. The chapter concludes with a survey of the risks to nurses which to date have formed little part of our understanding of the role.

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