2019
DOI: 10.1080/23337486.2019.1677040
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Medicos, poultice wallahs and comrades in service: masculinity and military medicine in Britain during the First World War

Abstract: The subject of British military medicine during the First World War has long been a fruitful one for historians of gender. From the bodily inspection of recruits and conscripts through the expanding roles of women as medical care providers to the physical and emotional aftermath of conflict experienced by men suffering from warrelated wounds and illness, the medical history of the war has shed important light on how the war shaped British masculinities and femininities as cultural, subjective and embodied iden… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
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