Florence Nightingale at home

Crawford, P., Greenwood, A., Bates, R. and Memel, J. (2020) Florence Nightingale at home. Palgrave, London. ISBN 9783030465346

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Abstract

Homes can be both comforting and troubling places. This timely book proposes a new understanding of Florence Nightingale’s experiences of domestic life and how ideas of home influenced her writings and pioneering work. From her childhood homes in Derbyshire and Hampshire, she visited the poor sick in their cottages. As a young woman, feeling imprisoned at home, she broke free to become a woman of action, bringing home comforts to the soldiers in the Crimean War and advising the British population on the home front how to create healthier, contagion-free homes. Later, she created Nightingale Homes for nursing trainees and acted as mother-in-chief to her extended family of nurses. These efforts, inspired by her Christian faith and training in human care from religious houses, led to major changes in professional nursing and public health, as Nightingale strove for homely, compassionate care in Britain and around the world. She did most of this work from her bed after contracting the debilitating illness, brucellosis, in the Crimea, turning her various private homes into offices and ‘households of faith’. In the year of the bicentenary of her birth, she remains as relevant as ever, achieving an astonishing cultural afterlife.

Item Type: Book
Divisions: School of Humanities
Depositing User: Jonathan Memel
Date Deposited: 27 Jul 2021 09:32
Last Modified: 27 Jul 2021 09:32
URI: https://bgro.repository.guildhe.ac.uk/id/eprint/864

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