Florence Nightingale on Social Change in India: Collected Works of Florence Nightingale

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Wilfrid Laurier Univ. Press, Dec 6, 2007 - Biography & Autobiography - 952 pages

Social Change in India shows the shift of focus that occurred during Florence Nightingale’s more than forty years of work on public health in India. While the focus in the preceding volume, Health in India, was top-down reform, notably in the Royal Commission on the Sanitary State of the Army in India, this book documents concrete proposals for self-government, especially at the municipal level, and the encouragement of leading Indian nationals themselves. Famine and related epidemics continue to be issues, demonstrating the need for public works like irrigation and for greater self-help measures like “health missioners” and self-government.

The book includes sections on village and town sanitation, the condition and status of women, land tenure, rent reform, and education and political evolution toward self-rule. Nightingale’s publications on these subjects appeared increasingly in Indian journals.

Correspondence shows Nightingale continuing to work behind the scenes, pressing viceroys, governors, and Cabinet ministers to take up the cause of sanitary reform. Her collaboration with Lord Ripon, viceroy 1880-84, was crucial, for he was a great promoter of Indian self-government.

Social Change in India features much new material, including a substantial number of long-missing letters to Lady Dufferin, wife of the viceroy 1884-88, on the provision of medical care for women in India, health education, and the promotion of women doctors. Biographical sketches of major collaborators, a glossary of Indian terms, and a list of Indian place names are also provided.

Currently, Volumes 1 to 11 are available in e-book version by subscription or from university and college libraries through the following vendors: Canadian Electronic Library, Ebrary, MyiLibrary, and Netlibrary.

 

Contents

The Zemindar the Sun and the Watering Pot 1874
401
The United Empire and the Indian Peasant 1878
487
Indian Letters 187882
500
The Dumb Shall Speak and the Deaf Shall Hear 1883
548
The Bengal Tenancy Bill 1883
598
Reform in Credit Cooperatives Education and Agriculture
621
Letter on Cooperation in India 1879
627
Can We Educate Education 1879
633

Viceroyalty of Lord Lytton 187680
135
Gladstone Fawcett and Indian Finance
151
The Native Army Hospital Corps
173
Changes in and Later Work of the Sanitary Commissions
182
Village and Town Sanitation
231
Letter to the Bengal Social Science Association 1870
233
On Indian Sanitation 1870
235
Sanitary Progress in India 1870
244
Observations on Sanitary Progress 1872
258
A Missionary Health Officer for India 1879
261
The Bombay Village Sanitation Bill 1885
311
Village Sanitation 1887
321
Viceroyalty of Lord Dufferin 188588
326
Viceroyalty of Lord Lansdowne 188894
340
Village Sanitation in India 1889
353
Sanitation in India February 1891
357
Sanitation in India December 1891
362
Letter to Lord Cross 1892
366
Health Lectures for Indian Villages 1893
375
Village Sanitation in India 1894
380
Health Missioners for Rural India 1896
388
Land Tenure and Rent Reform
393
Education Agriculture and Public Works
676
The Condition of Women in India
717
The Rukhmabai Case
774
Introduction to Behramji H Malabari 1892
777
Later Efforts on Nursing in India
779
Social and Political Evolution
797
The Ilbert Bill
799
Indian Society and Culture in Transition
806
Our Indian Stewardship 1883
818
Towards SelfGovernment and Independence
846
Nightingales Last Work on India and a Retrospective
879
Nightingales Achievements on India
890
Biographical Sketches
903
Dame Mary Scharlieb 18451930
905
Dadabhai Naoroji 18251917
907
Sir William Wedderburn 18381918
908
British Officials in Nightingales Time
910
Spelling of Indian Place Names
919
Glossary
921
Bibliography
925
Index
931
Copyright

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Page 926 - Work of the National Association for Supplying Female Medical Aid to the Women of India.

About the author (2007)

Gérard Vallée is professor emeritus of religious studies at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario (Canada). He studied in Québec and Germany, and worked in the fields of history of Christianity and philosophy of religion. He has also taught in Vietnam, India, and Nigeria. His publications include A Study in Anti-Gnostic Polemics (WLU Press, 1981), The Spinoza Conversations between Lessing and Jacobi (1988), The Shaping of Christianity 100-800 (1999), and Soundings in G.E. Lessing's Philosophy of Religion (2000). He has been involved in the editing of Nightingale's Collected Works since 1998.