6533b837fe1ef96bd12a1dce

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Mapping the war: gender, health, and the medical profession in France and Germany, 1914-1918.

Susanne Michl

subject

Malemedicine.medical_specialtySexually Transmitted DiseasesCriminologyPathology and Forensic MedicineMilitary medicineGermanPoliticsGermanyEpidemiologymedicineHumansSociologyWorld War IMilitary MedicineFront (military)National healthCombat DisordersHistory 20th Centurylanguage.human_languageSpanish Civil WarLawMedical professionlanguageFemaleFrance

description

This article compares the gender and health politics of the German and the French medical professions, which incorporated military command structures into their civilian self-conception. Mobilized doctors committed themselves to the new circumstances and opportunities offered by the war. They applied the established military spatial ‘map’ which distinguished between the male-dominated front and the female-dominated home front and turned it into an epidemiological map, identifying danger zones which arose from points of contact between men and women. The analysis singles out two case studies: the rapid spread of venereal disease and psychiatric disorders. These case studies allow for a comparative analysis of the following questions: How did doctors assess the impacts of the war on the individual and the society as a whole? How did they view the war’s impact on conventional gender orders, individual and national health? And how did they see their own role as a part of an independent civilian profession?

10.1080/13623699.2014.962234https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25310677