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African nurses and everyday work in twentieth-century Zimbabwe
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16 December 2020

MEDICAL / History, History of medicine, HISTORY / Africa / South / General, HISTORY / Social History, Nursing research and theory
1 Introduction: African nurses in Zimbabwe’s hospitals
2 The experiences of the pioneer generation of nurses, c. 1900–49
3 ‘Our kitchen days are over … We can no longer continue the tradition of our predecessors': Taking up nursing as a career option, c. 1950 to the 1960s
4 The Africanisation of Rhodesia’s clinical spaces and an anatomy of everyday work in hospitals, 1960–70
5 Nursing a nation at war: Nurses’ experiences during the 1970s
6 The trajectories of nursing in independent Zimbabwe, 1980–96
7 Conclusion: Nurses and nursing in twentieth-century Zimbabwe
Appendix 1: Colonial and post-colonial names
Appendix 2: Explanations and translations
Bibliography
Index