Detalle Publicación

The sage Nightingale and Cassandra: drafting the future of nursing

Título de la revista: COLLEGIAN
ISSN: 1322-7696
Volumen: 29
Número: 4
Páginas: 444 - 447
Fecha de publicación: 2022
Resumen:
Background: In a period of hopelessness motivated by a restrictive Victorian society that confined women to the domestic realm, Florence Nightingale wrote the cathartic Cassandra (1852) in an attempt to transform her despair into rebellion. Aims: To discuss Nightingale's approach to women's role in Cassandra. Methods: Historical Research was used to analyse Cassandra. Data gathered from primary and secondary sources were synthesised and reported in terms of their historical context and significance. Findings: Adopting the genre of `sage writing¿, Nightingale positions herself as a female messiah in an autoreferential narrative that projects women's future possibilities for release. Discussion: Assuming the identity of a prophetic Greek heroine cursed to never be believed, Nightingale's Cassandra claims professional work as the liberating solution for Victorian women. Conclusion: For the first time, Nightingale predicts in Cassandra some incipient prerequisites for a future nursing path for women's change.
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