Cassandra and Suggestions for Thought by Florence Nightingale - Pickering Women's Classics - Florence Nightingale - Books - Taylor & Francis Ltd - 9781851960224 - December 18, 1991
In case cover and title do not match, the title is correct

Cassandra and Suggestions for Thought by Florence Nightingale - Pickering Women's Classics 1st edition

Florence Nightingale

Price
$ 81.49

Ordered from remote warehouse

Expected delivery Dec 16 - 25
Christmas presents can be returned until 31 January
Add to your iMusic wish list

Also available as:

Cassandra and Suggestions for Thought by Florence Nightingale - Pickering Women's Classics 1st edition

Florence Nightingale is famous as the heroine of the Crimean War and later as a campaigner for medical care founded on a clean environment and good nursing. Suggestions for Thought, which contains the novel Cassandra, is a central text in nineteenth-century history of feminist thought.


Publisher Marketing: Florence Nightingale is famous as the heroine of the Crimean War and later as a campaigner for medical care founded on a clean environment and good nursing. Suggestions for Thought, which contains the novel Cassandra, is a central text in 19th century history of feminist thought.

Contributor Bio:  Nightingale, Florence Florence Nightingale was born in 1820. As a young woman, she felt God was calling her to do good work, and in 1851 she went to Germany for three months of nursing training that led to her becoming superintendent of a hospital for gentlewomen in London in 1853. That year, the Crimean War began, and newspapers described the desperate lack of proper medical facilities for wounded British soldiers at the front. The War Ministry asked Nightingale to oversee a team of nurses in the military hospitals, and in November 1854, she arrived in Turkey. With her nurses, she greatly improved the conditions and substantially reduced the mortality rate. When she returned to England, she established the Nightingale Training School for Nurses in London. Her trained nurses were sent to hospitals all over Britain, where they introduced new ideas and established nursing training on the Nightingale model. Nightingale's theories, published in "Notes on Nursing" (1860), were hugely influential, and her concerns for sanitation, military health, and hospital planning established practices still in existence today. She died in 1910. Contributor Bio:  Poovey, Mary Mary Poovey is Professor of English at Johns Hopkins University and the author of "The Proper Lady and the Woman Writer: Ideology and Style in the Works of Mary Wollstonecraft, Jane Austen, and Mary Shelley" and "Uneven Developments: The Ideological Works of Gender in Mid-Victorian England".

Media Books     Hardcover Book   (Book with hard spine and cover)
Released December 18, 1991
ISBN13 9781851960224
Publishers Taylor & Francis Ltd
Genre Sex & Gender > Feminine
Pages 220
Dimensions 234 × 154 × 19 mm   ·   368 g
Language English  
Editor Poovey, Mary

Show all

More by Florence Nightingale