American Decades
"Nursing as a Profession for College Women"
Journal article
By: Edna L. Foley
Date: May 1910
Source: Foley, Edna L. "Nursing as a Profession for College Women." American Journal of Nursing, 10, no. 8, May 1910, 533, 534, 535, 536.
About the Author: Edna L. Foley, who received her bachelor's degree at Smith College in 1901, was the supervising nurse at the Chicago Tuberculosis Institute.
Introduction
Alongside traditional occupational categories such as "white collar" or "blue collar," historians and sociologists are increasingly identifying the so-called pink collar occupational realm that features female-dominated jobs that are accorded low pay and little social status. This was clearly the case with nursing, perhaps the most "pink collar" career field of all. Centuries of staffing largely with nuns and community volunteers had served to render nursing a lowly, chronically underappreciated line of...
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1910's Medicine and Health Primary Sources
- "Nursing as a Profession for College Women"
- "How Physical Training Affects the Welfare of the Nation"
- Changes in Bodily Form of Descendants of Immigrants
- "Tobacco: A Race Poison"
- Painless Childbirth
- "The Endowment of Motherhood"
- "How the Drug Dopers Fight"
- "The Heart of the People"
- "Progress in Pediatrics"
- "Orthopedic Surgery in War Time"
- "War and Mental Diseases"
- "Some Considerations Affecting the Replacement of Men by Women Workers"
- Influenza Epidemic
- "The Fight Against Venereal Disease"
- "The Next War"
- Copyright Page
- Acknowledgments
