从黑暗到阳光失明婴儿、家庭和阳光之家,1918-1939 年

IF 0.3 3区 历史学 Q2 HISTORY Journal of Modern European History Pub Date : 2024-10-10 DOI:10.1177/16118944241287721
Julie Anderson
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文探讨了战时英国国家对母性的强调与对相对较少的盲婴进行机构照料的理由之间的对比。第一次世界大战后,对国家状况的担忧部分地通过立法和增加旨在帮助母亲抚养健康婴儿的组织数量来解决。人们对生下盲婴的母亲的关注主要集中在可怜的母亲是否有能力照顾视力受损的婴儿。当局的担忧、优生主义者对感官受损与学习困难之间联系的焦虑以及对失明造成的长期社会和经济损失的不安,都支持早期干预。不堪重负、疏于照顾的母亲的说法与机构收容的好处并列,这为将一些失明婴儿从家中带走提供了理由。黑暗的家庭和不开明的母亲被阳光盲婴之家明亮的环境所带来的光明和知识所取代。在战时,报纸、杂志和慈善宣传中的正面报道和文章,在包括英国皇室在内的权贵的支持下,将盲婴阳光之家描绘成一个充满爱的空间,这里有尽职尽责的专业护士,有善良富有的资助者;没有任何报道表明婴儿们只有最积极的体验。从根本上说,盲婴的亲生家庭被一个由护理人员和探访者组成的新机构家庭所取代,在某些情况下甚至是如此。
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From Darkness to Sunshine: Blind Babies, Families and the Sunshine Homes, 1918–1939
This article examines the contrast between the interwar British state's emphasis on motherhood and the justification for the institutional care of a relatively small group of blind babies. After the First World War, concerns about the state of the nation were addressed in part by legislation and an increase in the number of organisations which purported to help mothers to bring up healthy babies. The interest in mothers who gave birth to blind babies centred on the poor mother's ability to cope with a visually impaired infant. The authorities’ concerns, anxieties about the association between impaired senses and learning difficulties expressed by eugenicists and unease surrounding the long-term social and economic costs of blindness supported early intervention. The narrative of the overwhelmed and neglectful mother was juxtaposed with the benefit of institutionalisation, which justified the removal of some blind infants from their homes. The metaphor of the dark home and unenlightened mother was replaced by one of light and knowledge emanating from the brightly painted environs of the Sunshine Homes for Blind Babies. During the interwar period, positive reports and articles in newspapers, magazines and charitable propaganda, supported by powerful elites including the British royal family, presented the Sunshine Homes for Blind Babies as caring spaces full of the love of dedicated professional nurses, and kind, wealthy benefactors; there were no reports produced to suggest anything but the most positive experience for the infants. Essentially, a blind infant's biological family was metaphorically, and in some cases literally, replaced by a new institutional family of carers and visitors.
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CiteScore
0.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
42
期刊最新文献
Introduction: Disability and Family Care in Modern European History Social Science Data as a Challenge for Contemporary History From Darkness to Sunshine: Blind Babies, Families and the Sunshine Homes, 1918–1939 From Institutions to Families? The Changing Allocation of Responsibility for Cognitively Disabled Children in Dutch Postwar Long-Term Care Policies Redefining Family Relationships: The Impact of Disability on Working-Class Families during the Industrial Revolution in Britain
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