Reading, Trauma and Literary Caregiving 1914-1918: Helen Mary Gaskell and the War Library.
First world war
Helen Mary Gaskell
Literary caregiving
Reading
Trauma
War library
Journal
The Journal of medical humanities
ISSN: 1573-3645
Titre abrégé: J Med Humanit
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 8917478
Informations de publication
Date de publication:
Sep 2020
Sep 2020
Historique:
pubmed:
30
3
2018
medline:
28
4
2021
entrez:
30
3
2018
Statut:
ppublish
Résumé
This article is about the relationship between reading, trauma and responsive literary caregiving in Britain during the First World War. Its analysis of two little-known documents describing the history of the War Library, begun by Helen Mary Gaskell in 1914, exposes a gap in the scholarship of war-time reading; generates a new narrative of "how," "when," and "why" books went to war; and foregrounds gender in its analysis of the historiography. The Library of Congress's T. W. Koch discovered Gaskell's ground-breaking work in 1917 and reported its successes to the American Library Association. The British Times also covered Gaskell's library, yet researchers working on reading during the war have routinely neglected her distinct model and method, skewing the research base on war-time reading and its association with trauma and caregiving. In the article's second half, a literary case study of a popular war novel demonstrates the extent of the "bitter cry for books." The success of Gaskell's intervention is examined alongside H. G. Wells's representation of textual healing. Reading is shown to offer sick, traumatized and recovering combatants emotional and psychological caregiving in ways that she could not always have predicted and that are not visible in the literary/historical record.
Identifiants
pubmed: 29594635
doi: 10.1007/s10912-018-9513-5
pii: 10.1007/s10912-018-9513-5
pmc: PMC7343721
doi:
Types de publication
Journal Article
Langues
eng
Sous-ensembles de citation
IM