This book is the first comprehensive history of Irish women in medicine in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. It focuses on the debates surrounding women's admission to Irish medical schools, the geographical and social backgrounds of early women medical students, their educational experiences and their subsequent careers. Kelly portrays Irish medical schools as open-minded with regard to the admission of women to the medical profession and suggests that women were treated fairly during their time in medical education. The study highlights major differences between Irish and British experiences: most significantly, that Irish institutions were more open-minded than Britain's with regard to attitudes towards women's medical education, and that the Irish system of medical education was inclusive and paternalistic towards women students. At the same time, women medical students, in common with their British and American sisters, were certainly seen as a separate cohort from the men and had a distinctive social identity which was crafted both by and for them. The book also covers women's subsequent careers within the medical profession. Most importantly, this book will change the way we consider the history of women in medicine, higher education and the professions in Ireland.
Introduction
1. Debates surrounding women's admission to the medical profession
2. The admission of women to the KQCPI and Irish medical schools
3. Becoming a medical student
4. Women's experiences of Irish medical education
5. Careers and opportunities
6. Trends in the careers of Irish women doctors: emigration, marriage and the First World War
7. Medical lives: case-studies of five Irish women medical graduates
8. Conclusions
Bibliography
Index
This volume injects some overdue energy into this important topic. It is meticulously researched, well written and offers scholars a number of research aveló!