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Hearts of Wisdom: American Women Caring for Kin, 1850-1940 [Hardcover]

Emily K. Abel (Author)


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Book Description

0674003144 978-0674003149 November 20, 2000
The image of the female caregiver holding a midnight vigil at the bedside of a sick relative is so firmly rooted in our collective imagination we might assume that such caregiving would have attracted the scrutiny of numerous historians. As Emily Abel demonstrates in this groundbreaking study of caregiving in America across class and ethnic divides and over the course of ninety years, this has hardly been the case.

While caring for sick and disabled family members was commonplace for women in nineteenth- and early-twentieth-century America, that caregiving, the caregivers' experience of it, and the medical profession's reaction to it took diverse and sometimes unexpected forms. A complex series of historical changes, Abel shows, has profoundly altered the content and cultural meaning of care. Hearts of Wisdom is an immersion into that "world of care." Drawing on antebellum slave narratives, white farm women's diaries, and public health records, Abel puts together a multifaceted picture of what caregiving meant to American women--and what it cost them--from the pre-Civil War years to the brink of America's entry into the Second World War. She shows that caregiving offered women an arena in which experience could be parlayed into expertise, while at the same time the revolution in bacteriology and the transformation of the formal health care system were weakening women's claim to that expertise. (20010501)


Editorial Reviews

From The New England Journal of Medicine

The history of private care for the sick or disabled is an area much neglected by historians of health and medicine. It is a rich history, however, and one that also has a place in the history of private life, the family, and community relations. If it is a neglected history, however, it is also an undervalued one, especially in the history of health and medicine. Private care for the sick by family members and neighbors has always been the primary form of nursing care, and it remains so in poor countries. Care as a gift relationship lies at the core of family life in most cultures, and care as a fundamental human relationship is the subject of Emily K. Abel's fine book, Hearts of Wisdom.

Abel writes her history from the perspective of those within these care relationships, working from diaries and letters, both private correspondence and public letters of pleading to governmental agencies and care institutions. The words are largely those of the caregivers rather than those of their patients, although one important voice in the book makes the painful transition from caregiver to dependent. Abel's is a partial story, confined to the testimony of the few who wrote diaries and letters that passed down to posterity, but it is no less valuable for that. Not all her correspondents and diarists are comfortable with literacy, however, and neither are all of them admirable women; on the contrary, some are all too human.

Abel recreates the world of private care, especially as it existed far from professional help in remote, pioneering communities. The poor and the isolated depended on each neighborhood's or community's having at least one woman who was good at delivering babies, nursing the sick, and laying out the dead. Many women did become very handy in the sickroom, skilled at the feeding, toileting, and bathing of invalids and even at the management of catheters and drains. Abel is quick to quell any romanticizing of lay nursing or midwifery, but there is no question that many women possessed a natural flair for both the physical and the emotional care of those who were suffering.

However, the time span of this history -- 1850 to 1940 -- also encompasses the ending of this world of private care as a result of the rise of biomedical expertise, the professionalization of nursing, and the growth of hospitals and asylums. Private care gave way, not always willingly, to professional care. The disinterested expert trained in the universal, standard care of the universal, standard patient supplanted the voluntary caregiver recruited to the task through familial or community bonds. The appeal of biomedicine, of course, sprang from the reality that even before antibiotics, nursing care did have something special to offer to the sick and injured: supportive care of the sick so that the natural powers could effect healing. This is another neglected area of the history of medicine. Abel pays some attention to the actual tasks of home nursing, such as bathing and turning, but more needs to be said generally about the improvements in nursing care by the end of the 19th century that were really beginning to save lives.

Nurses in hospitals and trained private nurses working under medical direction could be very skilled in keeping dangerously ill patients alive. This care was astonishingly intimate and emotionally charged. In the days before intravenous drips, constant verbal and physical encouragement was needed to keep patients sucking ice, sipping stimulants, and swallowing morsels. Catheters and drains, especially before the invention of rubber, required constant vigilance. Enemas (including nutrient enemas), douches, and irrigations took considerable skill. Patients had to be turned, washed, powdered, and rubbed with methylated spirits. Poultices were complicated; suppurating wounds had to be dressed. All of this required touching and talking, and even in hospitals, nurses often "specialled," forming a powerful commitment to particular patients, and the touching and talking were often vital to recovery.

What Abel tells well is the story of the influence of germ theory on care in the home, and wisely, she chooses tuberculosis for her case study. No contagious disease caused as much private anguish as this one, once it was discovered that people with tubercular infection were dangerous to those around them. The accounts of struggles between officials who sought to isolate infected patients from their families are painful to read. So also are the accounts of interactions between institutional authorities and mothers of those who were deaf, "feeble-minded," or epileptic.

Abel's Hearts of Wisdom is more than a history; it is also a moral reflection on the meaning of caregiving in private life. If the welfare state in its various forms was initially needed in part to provide a safety net of care for those without families, its rise may also have diminished the moral value of private care. Throughout her book, Abel emphasizes the moral growth and emotional enrichment that caring induces in most of us: it is one of the most important things that make us human, and we neglect it at our shared peril.

Janet McCalman, Ph.D.
Copyright © 2001 Massachusetts Medical Society. All rights reserved. The New England Journal of Medicine is a registered trademark of the MMS.

Review

This excellent historical review of female caregiving within families as a transformative experience identifies conditions that make this form of human connectedness rewarding and meaningful.
--J.E. Thompson (Choice )

Despite a growing population over eighty, public policy concentrates on childcare and forgets eldercare. Emily Abel's wise and heartfelt book powerfully evaluates this terrain by giving carework a history.
--Eileen Boris (The Women's Review of Books )

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 336 pages
  • Publisher: Harvard University Press (November 20, 2000)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0674003144
  • ISBN-13: 978-0674003149
  • Product Dimensions: 9.6 x 6.5 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.5 pounds
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,369,802 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
sanatorium placement, empathic knowledge, caregiving obligations, many letter writers, charity workers, overwhelmed mothers, field nurses, epileptic children
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Children's Bureau, New York, Craig Colony, American Indian, Randall's Island, Department of Health, African American, Volta Review, New Jersey, Great Depression, United States, Eleanor Roosevelt, Emily Gillespie, Sarah Gillespie, South Carolina, Silver Lake, Quilting Bees, Metropolitan Hospital, Mary Ann Webber, West Virginia, Infant Care, North Carolina, Mary Ann Owen Sims, Medicine Lodge, Los Angeles
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Front Cover | Table of Contents | First Pages | Index | Back Cover | Surprise Me!
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