Lucy Osburn, a Lady Displaced: Florence Nightingale's Envoy to Australia
By (Author) Judith Godden
Sydney University Press
Sydney University Press
6th September 2006
Australia
General
Non Fiction
General and world history
Nursing
610.73092
Paperback
317
Width 148mm, Height 210mm, Spine 22mm
490g
Lucy Osburn (1836-1891) was the founder of modern nursing in Australia who also pioneered the employment of high status professional women in public institutions. Osburn learned her vocation at Florence Nightingale's school of nursing in London, but her relationship with Nightingale was not the smooth discourse of "Victorian ladies". Godden uses extensive and frank correspondence to build an intriguing picture of life for an independent middle-class woman. Osburn's triumphs and trials in New South Wales typify the struggles the colony faced in its relations with the Mother Country, and with new roles in the workplace for women. An enthralling and enlightening read.
'... it is an important book for Nightingale scholars and for colonial nursing history.' -- Merlyn Stuart * Nursing History Review *
'Godden's portrait of Lucy Osburn is both informative and entertaining, and it would have a wide appeal to many audiences. This is a wellwritten and engaging book. To a researcher interested in the development of women's careers, it offers a poignant lesson in the difficulties faced by women who stepped outside the traditional roles of wife and mother in the Victorian age.' -- Diana Jefferies * Journal of Religious Studies *
'Godden sets Lucy Osburns time in Australia firmly in its social and political context. Many of Osburns letters to Florence Nightingale have survived, and Godden was able to examine in some detail the tense relationships between Nightingale in England, Osburn in Sydney and the various members of Sydneys political and medical elites.' -- Sally Wilde * Australian Journal of Politics and History *
'Godden has made extensive use of an exceptional array of primary sources, and the research is meticulous throughout ... Lucy Osburn, a Lady Displaced is a particularly arresting addition to medical and nursing history, biography and colonial womens history. Better still, it will be read with pleasure, as well as much gain.' -- Lisa Featherstone * History Australia *
'Godden's book is a richtextured read and a major contribution to the literature in a number of fields: Victorian studies, gender studies, colonial history and the history of medicine and nursing. While it is an important Australian story, Australia only provides the setting. So much of the story is that of a lady, displaced within the empire, restless and capable, but at the mercy of the elements. Godden's sympathetic and rigorous treatment of the subject will stand.' -- Sioban Nelson * Nursing Inquiry *
'In an engaging and highly readable style, University of Sydney historian, Judith Godden has reconstructed the life of New South Wales' first professional nurse, Lucy Osburn.' -- Melanie Oppenheimer * Labour History *
'This is a detailed narrative history which is enjoyable and certainly informative. Godden provides insights into colonial institutions and female power, class and gender roles, also commenting briefly on Osburn's sexuality and to an extent, her emotional experiences. An important contribution to medical/nursing biography, this work could also be read as a contribution to feminist history and the social history of women's work and colonial life.' -- Catharine Coleborne * Australian Historical Studies *
'This book is a model of careful scholarship. It is more than a biography of a flawed but determined individual; it is an account of changing gender relation ships and the development of institutionalised medical practice. It is also very readable, perhaps due to what the author describes as 'the unholy trinity of sex, politics and religion.' -- Peter J. Tyler * Journal of the Royal Australian Historical Society *
'Judith Godden's lively and insightful biography sets Osburn's contribution to the Sydney Infirmary in the wider context of her life and does not shirk from criticism of those aspects of her character which undermined her effectiveness as a flag bearer for Nightingale's vision.' * Health & History *
' ... this is a 'riveting read'. I found it impossible to put down as each chapter revealed yet more about this independent, stubborn, courageous and sometimes misguided woman who always seemed to relish a fight.' -- Judith A. Cornell AM * Nursing.Aust *
Judith Godden is an honorary associate of the Department of History at the University of Sydney.