dc.creatorSantos, LAD
dc.creatorFaria, L
dc.date2008
dc.dateAPR-JUN
dc.date2014-11-18T02:38:49Z
dc.date2015-11-26T16:49:52Z
dc.date2014-11-18T02:38:49Z
dc.date2015-11-26T16:49:52Z
dc.date.accessioned2018-03-28T23:36:37Z
dc.date.available2018-03-28T23:36:37Z
dc.identifierSaude E Sociedade. Univ Sao Paulo, Fac Saude Publica, v. 17, n. 2, n. 35, n. 44, 2008.
dc.identifier0104-1290
dc.identifierWOS:000261042700004
dc.identifierhttp://www.repositorio.unicamp.br/jspui/handle/REPOSIP/72525
dc.identifierhttp://www.repositorio.unicamp.br/handle/REPOSIP/72525
dc.identifierhttp://repositorio.unicamp.br/jspui/handle/REPOSIP/72525
dc.identifier.urihttp://repositorioslatinoamericanos.uchile.cl/handle/2250/1275573
dc.descriptionThis is a study about women as health educators and public health nurses in the first half of the 20(th) century in Brazil. Historical sociology, as a methodological and theoretical tool, will guide our analysis of the relations among,institutions, professional power, and identities, highlighting the ways through which women professionals were capable-of creating their own territory of autonomous action. In Brazil, the configuration of the public health field in the early 1920S was intimately associated with nation-building processes, and demanded new professionals for traditionally female occupations. The training of the young candidates took peace at the Oswaldo Cruz Institute, in Rio de Janeiro, at Sao Paulo's Institute of Hygiene, at Medical Schools, in foreign centers such as the Teachers College and the Toronto School of Nursing, as well as by means of on-the-job training. The sociological literature has stressed the (basically male) medical dominance, to the detriment of a focus on-the new emerging professions. This trend has been clear in Brazil, and it is time that the "sociological gaze" took a close interest in the unique role played by women as health educators and visiting nurses, based in community health centers as early as 1925 in Sao Paulo, Rio de Janeiro and other centers, and in rural health units across the nation. Health education was the key element in this new scenario of campaigns against endemic diseases - a national practice which Brazilians called "campanhismo" - that stressed non-authoritarian means in place of old schemes of medical policy.
dc.description17
dc.description2
dc.description35
dc.description44
dc.languagept
dc.publisherUniv Sao Paulo, Fac Saude Publica
dc.publisherSao Paulo Sp
dc.publisherBrasil
dc.relationSaude E Sociedade
dc.relationSaude Soc.
dc.rightsaberto
dc.sourceWeb of Science
dc.subjectSociology of Professions
dc.subjectProfessional Identity
dc.subjectGender
dc.subjectPublic Health Nursing
dc.subjectHealth Educators
dc.titleThe Supposedly Subaltern Progressions: the example of Brazilian nursing
dc.typeArtículos de revistas


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