03672oam 2200685I 450 991078381410332120230207225159.01-134-66825-20-203-13602-01-134-66826-01-280-01865-80-203-17115-2978661001865910.4324/9780203136027 (CKB)1000000000252297(EBL)165601(OCoLC)49569394(SSID)ssj0000212987(PQKBManifestationID)11201701(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000212987(PQKBWorkID)10140465(PQKB)11035450(MiAaPQ)EBC165601(EXLCZ)99100000000025229720180706d2000 uy 0engtxtccrNursing the image media, culture and professional identity /Julia HallamLondon ;New York :Routledge,2000.1 online resource (253 p.)Description based upon print version of record.0-415-18455-X 0-415-18454-1 Includes bibliographical references (pages 202-230) and index.Cover; Nursing the images: Media, culture and professional identity; Copyright; Contents; Acknowledgements; List of illustrations; Illustration acknowledgements; Introduction: (Auto)biography, research and feminist cultural studies; 1. Images, identities and selves; Images: nursing and femininity; Identities: nurses and their professional image; Selves: personal conceptions of professional identity; 2. The popular imagination; Reification and recruitment: images in post-war Britain; Irreverence and romance: the 1950's and 1960's; Fascination and aspiration: the romantic idealSoap, sex and satire: the late 1960's and early 1970's 3. The professional imagination; A divided identity; Class divisions: job or profession?; Gender divisions: men enter the picture; Racial divisions: visible differences; Image and identity: Briggs and the image of nursing; 4. The personal imagination; Self-image and uniform identities; Knowing your place: hierarchy, status and the self; Out of place: re-location, racism and the 'other'; The 'proper nurse': self as image, image as self; 5. The contemporary imagination; Recruitment in crisis; Romance in crisisEqual opportunities in crisis: medical drama Carry on caring; Notes; References and bibliography; IndexIdeas of 'nursing' and 'nurses' carry a powerful social charge. The image of the nurse continues to be a symbol of caring and of duty at the same time as it projects a view of femininity, 'stereotypical' in its gender relations.How has this image come to be constructed?An empirical investigation of representations of nursing practices in Britain focusing on publicity and promotional materials and their relationship to popular fictional narratives reveals a strong correlation between what are usually described as discrete forms of signification. Recruitment images, provide anNursesStereotypingPrejudiceSocial PerceptionFeminismUnited KingdomNurses.Stereotyping.Prejudice.Social Perception.Feminism.610.7301Hallam Julia1952-,893446AU-PeELAU-PeELAU-PeELBOOK9910783814103321Nursing the image3857473UNINA