Nurse going native: Language and identity in letters from Africa and the British West Indies.

IF 0.3 3区 文学 0 LITERATURE, AFRICAN, AUSTRALIAN, CANADIAN
JOURNAL OF COMMONWEALTH LITERATURE Pub Date : 2016-03-01 Epub Date: 2015-01-28 DOI:10.1177/0021989414563149
Jessica M Howell
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

Colonial nurses were ideal agents of colonial medicine's supposed beneficence: while practising and teaching "hygiene", they also reinforced racial and cultural separation. In some cases, however, the nurses took their role as healers and teachers of local populations much more seriously than was authorized implicitly by their employer. This article analyses the circulation of original life writing materials between one nurse, CC, and the Colonial Nursing Association, in order to chart the considerable anxiety around the concept of nurses' cross-cultural and cross-racial sympathy during the interwar period. I draw upon colonial language studies and women's travel writing analysis in order to demonstrate that many of these concerns centred on issues of language and communication. By speaking local languages, it was feared that colonial nurses' loyalty would shift from their employer towards their indigenous patients. This essay places the concept of "going native" within the contexts of nineteenth-century empire literature, racial anthropology and ethnology, in order to suggest that concerns about nurses "going native" were influenced by discourses of degeneration and acclimatization.

护士本土化:来自非洲和英属西印度群岛的信件中的语言和身份。
殖民地护士是殖民地医学所谓的慈善事业的理想代理人:在实践和教授“卫生”的同时,他们也加强了种族和文化的分离。然而,在某些情况下,护士把自己作为当地居民的治疗师和教师的角色看得比雇主暗中授权的要严肃得多。本文分析了一名护士CC与殖民地护理协会之间的原始生活写作材料的流通,以描绘两次世界大战期间围绕护士跨文化和跨种族同情概念的巨大焦虑。我借鉴了殖民语言研究和妇女旅行写作分析,以证明许多这些问题集中在语言和交流问题上。由于说当地语言,人们担心殖民地护士的忠诚会从雇主转移到土著病人身上。本文将“走向本土”的概念置于19世纪帝国文学、种族人类学和民族学的语境中,以表明对护士“走向本土”的关注受到退化和适应的话语的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
JOURNAL OF COMMONWEALTH LITERATURE
JOURNAL OF COMMONWEALTH LITERATURE LITERATURE, AFRICAN, AUSTRALIAN, CANADIAN-
CiteScore
0.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
26
期刊介绍: "The Journal of Commonwealth Literature has long established itself as an invaluable resource and guide for scholars in the overlapping fields of commonwealth Literature, Postcolonial Literature and New Literatures in English. The journal is an institution, a household word and, most of all, a living, working companion." Edward Baugh The Journal of Commonwealth Literature is internationally recognized as the leading critical and bibliographic forum in the field of Commonwealth and postcolonial literatures. It provides an essential, peer-reveiwed, reference tool for scholars, researchers, and information scientists. Three of the four issues each year bring together the latest critical comment on all aspects of ‘Commonwealth’ and postcolonial literature and related areas, such as postcolonial theory, translation studies, and colonial discourse. The fourth issue provides a comprehensive bibliography of publications in the field
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