[On May 21st,
1881, Clara Barton founded the American National Red Cross. So this week
I’ll AmericanStudy a handful of histories and contexts related to nursing and
medical aid, starting with my colleague and friend Irene’s Guest Post on Barton
herself! Add your responses and thoughts for a healthy crowd-sourced weekend
post, please!]
On pushing
beyond our understandable but simplistic images of wartime service.
First, I’d ask
you to check out this wonderful
PBS American Experience article
by Professor Marian
Moser Jones on the more than 22,000 professionally trained female nurses who
served with the US Army during World War I (more than 10,000 of them near the
Western Front and perilously close to combat). Then c’mon back here and we’ll
talk some more!
Welcome back!
Clearly those amazing stories (and the tens of thousands more not featured in
that article) are well worth remembering and retelling for their own sake, but
I would also highlight an important broader effect of doing so. When we think
about military service in a conflict
like the Great War—and I’m as guilty of this as anyone, to be clear—I believe
we almost always think about members of the armed forces, those directly
involved in combat operations. Certainly I don’t want to downplay what those
men (and it was all men in the US armed forces in the Great War) experienced; but
as Jones’s article details clearly, nurses at the Western Front went through
many of the same experiences as men in the armed forces, including incoming
bombs, shrapnel damage and other serious wounds, infections and contagious
disease, and more. To put it simply, war’s threats and effects do not
discriminate, nor they are aware of the specific role (much less the gender) of
those affected.
Thinking about
these WW1 nurses as fully part of wartime service isn’t just (or even
primarily) about gender equality or women’s rights. Instead, doing so helps us
more accurately assess and engage with particular historical and social
questions: what these women faced and experienced; what those experiences meant
and contributed to the war effort; what effects they had on their careers, lives,
and identities moving forward. Of course nursing isn’t the same as fighting in
combat, but the same could be said of many of the roles undertaken by
particular soldiers: radio operators, for example. The truth is that military
service entails many different elements, with direct participation in combat operations
one central thread but far from the only one. And it seems clear to me from the
stories and histories detailed in Jones’s article that these WW1 nurses took
part in military service in any and every way we could understand that concept,
and deserve to be remembered as part of that broader American community and
history.
Last nursing
post tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Other nursing or medical histories you’d highlight?
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