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book (3)


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English (3)


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2009 (3)

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Considerations for pregnant women who are more likely to be exposed to novel H1N1 flu (swine flu) at work : Information for women in education, child care, and health care.
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Year: 2009 Publisher: Atlanta, GA : Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,

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Mary Putnam Jacobi & the politics of medicine in nineteenth-century America
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ISBN: 1469606445 9781469606446 9780807832837 0807832839 0807859478 9798890880086 1469683938 Year: 2009 Publisher: Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press

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In the late nineteenth century, as Americans debated the ""woman question,"" a battle over the meaning of biology arose in the medical profession. Some medical men claimed that women were naturally weak, that education would make them physically ill, and that women physicians endangered the profession. Mary Putnam Jacobi (1842-1906), a physician from New York, worked to prove them wrong and argued that social restrictions, not biology, threatened female health. Mary Putnam Jacobi and the Politics of Medicine in Nineteenth-Century America is the first full-length biography of Mar


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Medical authority and Englishwomen's herbal texts, 1550-1650
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ISBN: 9780754666783 9781315249353 9781351918787 9781138250529 Year: 2009 Publisher: Farnham Ashgate

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The first study to analyze print vernacular folio herbals from the standpoint of gender and to present original findings to do with early modern women's ownership of these herbals, "Medical Authority and Englishwomen's Herbal Texts" also looks at reasons and contexts behind early modern female writers claiming herbal practice. Author Rebecca Laroche first establishes cultural backdrops in the gendering of medical authority that takes place in the herbals and the regular ownership of these herbals by women. She then examines women's engagements with herbal texts in life writings and poetry and asks how these moments represent and engage medical authority. In ultimately demonstrating how female writers variously take on women's herbal medical practices, Laroche reveals the broad range of literary potentials within the historical category of women's medicine.

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