Health and Girlhood in Britain, 1874-1920

Health and Girlhood in Britain, 1874-1920
Title Health and Girlhood in Britain, 1874-1920 PDF eBook
Author H. Marland
Publisher Springer
Pages 370
Release 2013-07-12
Genre Science
ISBN 1137328142

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This first major study of girls' health in modern Britain explores how debates and advice on healthy girlhood shaped ideas about the lives of young women from the 1870s to the 1920s, as theories concerning the biological limitations of female adolescence were challenged and girls moved into new arenas in the workplace, sport and recreation.

Picturing Women's Health

Picturing Women's Health
Title Picturing Women's Health PDF eBook
Author Ji Won Chung
Publisher Routledge
Pages 238
Release 2015-10-06
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 1317319265

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The essays in this collection examine women in diverse roles; mother, socialite, prostitute, celebrity, medical practitioner and patient. The wide range of commentators allows a diverse picture of women’s health in this period.

Reading the Nineteenth-Century Medical Journal

Reading the Nineteenth-Century Medical Journal
Title Reading the Nineteenth-Century Medical Journal PDF eBook
Author Sally Frampton
Publisher Routledge
Pages 104
Release 2020-12-28
Genre History
ISBN 1000294048

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This book explores medical and health periodicals of the nineteenth century: their contemporary significance, their readership, and how historians have approached them as objects of study. From debates about women doctors in lesser-known titles such as the Medical Mirror, to the formation of professional medical communities within French and Portuguese periodicals, the contributors to this volume highlight the multi-faceted nature of these publications as well as their uses to the historian. Medical periodicals – far from being the preserve of doctors and nurses – were also read by the general public. Thus, the contributions collected here will be of interest not only to the historian of medicine, but also to those interested in nineteenth-century periodical culture more broadly. The chapters in this book were originally published as a special issue of the journal Media History.

Publics and their health

Publics and their health
Title Publics and their health PDF eBook
Author Alex Mold
Publisher Manchester University Press
Pages 130
Release 2023-03-07
Genre Medical
ISBN 1526156741

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The COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in a renewed interest in the relationship between public health authorities and the public. Particular attention has been paid to ‘problem publics’ who do not follow health advice. This is not a new issue. As the chapters in this collection demonstrate, the designation of certain groups or populations as problem publics has long been a part of health policy and practice. By exploring the creation and management of these problem publics in a range of time periods and geographical locations, the collection sheds light on what is both specific and particular. For health authorities, publics themselves were often thought to pose problems, because of their behaviour, identity or location. But publics could and did resist this framing. There were, and continue to be, many problems with seeing publics as problems.

Exercise in the Female Life-Cycle in Britain, 1930-1970

Exercise in the Female Life-Cycle in Britain, 1930-1970
Title Exercise in the Female Life-Cycle in Britain, 1930-1970 PDF eBook
Author Eilidh Macrae
Publisher Springer
Pages 262
Release 2016-07-09
Genre History
ISBN 1137583193

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This book examines how adolescence, menstruation and pregnancy were experienced or ‘managed’ by active women in Britain between 1930 and 1970, and how their athletic life-styles interacted with their working lives, marriage and motherhood. It explores the gendered barriers which have influenced women’s sporting experiences. Women’s lives have always been shaped by the socially and physically constructed life-cycle, and this is all the more apparent when we look at female exercise. Even self-proclaimed ‘sporty’ women have had to negotiate obstacles at various stages of their lives to try and maintain their athletic identity. So how did women overcome these obstacles to gain access to exercise in a time when the sportswoman was not an image society was wholly comfortable with? Oral history testimony and extensive archival research show how the physically and socially constructed female life-cycle shaped women’s experiences of exercise and sport throughout these decades.

Space and Everyday Lives of Children in Hong Kong

Space and Everyday Lives of Children in Hong Kong
Title Space and Everyday Lives of Children in Hong Kong PDF eBook
Author Stella Meng Wang
Publisher Springer Nature
Pages 278
Release 2024-01-23
Genre Education
ISBN 3031444019

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Deploying a spatial approach towards children’s everyday life in interwar Hong Kong, this book considers the context-specific development of five transnational movements: the garden city movement; imperial hygiene movement; nationalist sentiments; the Young Women's Christian Association; and the Girl Guide. Locating these transnational cultural movements in four layers of context, from the most immediate to the most global, including the context of Hong Kong, Republican China, the British empire, and global influences, this book shows Hong Kong as a distinctive colonial domain where the imperatives around race, gender and class produced new products of empire where the child, the garden, the school and sport turned out to be the main dynamics in play in the interwar period.

Women, Horse Sports and Liberation

Women, Horse Sports and Liberation
Title Women, Horse Sports and Liberation PDF eBook
Author Erica Munkwitz
Publisher Routledge
Pages 256
Release 2021-07-13
Genre History
ISBN 0429559380

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*Shortlisted for the 2022 Lord Aberdare Literary Prize* This book is the first, full-length scholarly examination of British women’s involvement in equestrianism from the eighteenth through the twentieth centuries, as well as the corresponding transformations of gender, class, sport, and national identity in Britain and its Empire. It argues that women’s participation in horse sports transcended limitations of class and gender in Britain and highlights the democratic ethos that allowed anyone skilled enough to ride and hunt – from chimney-sweep to courtesan. Furthermore, women’s involvement in equestrianism reshaped ideals of race and reinforced imperial ideology at the zenith of the British Empire. Here, British women abandoned the sidesaddle – which they had been riding in for almost half a millennium – to ride astride like men, thus gaining complete equality on horseback. Yet female equestrians did not seek further emancipation in the form of political rights. This paradox – of achieving equality through sport but not through politics – shows how liberating sport was for women into the twentieth century. It brings into question what “emancipation” meant in practice to women in Britain from the eighteenth through twentieth centuries. This is fascinating reading for scholars of sports history, women's history, British history, and imperial history, as well as those interested in the broader social, gendered, and political histories of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, and for all equestrian enthusiasts.