Discipline of Nursing. Michel Nadot

Discipline of Nursing - Michel Nadot


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related to the characteristics of gender, the woman, the mother, the governess and her servant or mistress of the house. In any case, there was a household to organize!

      The knowledge of the age of lay knowledge was heterogeneous, disparate, vulgar, tacit and implicit. This knowledge had little to do with medicine. But it was in line with local knowledge of experience related to the exploitation of a domain, efforts to ensure survival and representations about health. We do not recognize them because we do not talk about them. Those who used this knowledge did not even exist. They had no status other than that of a servant conferred by the patricians of a city or the hospital’s Board of Directors. An existence to be enjoyed in some way. Women had no existence in the medieval hospital. Yet there was no lack of work! Women were still excluded from collective identities in the age of lay knowledge. The most literate even found it difficult to publish under their real names. In fact, “the lay knowledge of healthcare was structured according to the history and culture of the group from which it originates” [DAL 08b]. It is modestly and with difficulty found in the category of women, domestic servants, housekeepers and hospital maids. However, it must be recognized that this is the group from which nursing originated. As you can see, we come from very far away!

      Even at the level of hospital archives, it happens that the traces of domestic work were those of the working classes and maids, and no effort was made to list, classify and identify them. What was the point? Thus, we can sometimes find whole bundles of forgotten hospital parchments or books of accounts which concern precisely care in the secular period.

      The sources of knowledge on aid to daily and institutional life are sometimes found abandoned under the stairs of a museum or in the civil defense shelters of a town hall, because there has not yet been time to inventory them. This is how, for example, the history of medicine comes before the history of knowledge about care.

      However, let us recognize that there are certainly more medical historians than there are nursing historians. The research budget in nursing faculties on this topic is probably lower than the budget that has long been spent in history faculties for medicine.

      Restoring the professional group’s memory is not a matter of course. The writings of women caregivers are indeed quite rare. They have an oral tradition and have not left many traces of their activity. “Either they are not introduced to writing or they are denied access to it so as not to write their own writings” [COL 92]. Not very initiated to writing, this is the case of those who were presented as governesses, servants, hospital maids under the Ancien Régime2 and graduate nurses until the end of the 20th Century. We also know that historical sources relevant to the nursing profession and the history of women are not always kept in an official archive department. The public archives “were constituted by men on the actions of men; women only appear in the background, when they appear” [DIÉ 88]. Some hospital archives are rather difficult to access due to the lack of awareness of places of memory.

      We can agree with some of the students’ concerns. History does not really help to heal. But it has never displayed that purpose! Nor does it help to apply an ordinary healing technique. It does not help to master the knowledge and daily gestures necessary to take care of people who expect service from nurses. This disillusionment among some students taking a history course when they are impatient to discover their future place of work so that they can finally “be able to give injections or treatments”, to use a cliché, means that the history resulting from fundamental research on the discipline does not provide them with any means of establishing their know-how. This is a fact. The impact of history has no relevance if the motivation to know the traditions of language and where one comes from is met with indifference or incomprehension.


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