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An Historiography of Twentieth-Century Women’s Missionary Nursing Through the Lives of Two Sisters

Doing the Lord’s Work in Kenya and South India

Sara Ashencaen Crabtree (Bournemouth University, UK)

$273

Hardback

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English
Routledge
19 December 2023
This volume draws on a trove of unpublished original material from the pre-1940s to the present to offer a unique historiographic study of twentieth century Methodist missionary work and women’s active expression of faith practised at the critical confluence of historical and global changes.

The study focuses on two English Methodist missionary nursing sisters and siblings, Audrey and Muriel Chalkely, whose words and experiences are captured in detail, foregrounding tumultuous socio-political changes of the end of Empire and post-Independence in twentieth-century Kenya and South India. The work presents a timely revision to prevailing post-colonial critiques in placing the fundamental importance of human relationships centre stage. Offering a detailed (auto)biographical and reflective narrative, this ‘herstory’ pivots on three main thematic strands relating to people, place and passion, where socio-cultural details are vividly explored.

The book will appeal to a wide range of readers, both the interested public and the academic alike, where a lively, entertaining, literary style introduces readers to the politics of women’s lives, and principle and professional service foreground ethno-class-caste oppression, emancipation, conflict, commitments and religious tensions. It reveals the human, vulnerable qualities of these women, illuminating their stories and courageous choices.

By:  
Imprint:   Routledge
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 229mm,  Width: 152mm, 
Weight:   720g
ISBN:   9781032417967
ISBN 10:   103241796X
Series:   Routledge Research in Gender and History
Pages:   260
Publication Date:  
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Sara Ashencaen Crabtree is Professor of Social and Cultural Diversity, Bournemouth University, UK, and Professor Emeritus, University of Stavanger, Norway. An internationally renowned social scientist, she publishes prolifically, on faith, gender, diversity, welfare and vulnerability.

Reviews for An Historiography of Twentieth-Century Women’s Missionary Nursing Through the Lives of Two Sisters: Doing the Lord’s Work in Kenya and South India

“Sara Ashencaen Crabtree's fascinating exploration of the lives of Muriel and Audrey Chalkley, two sisters whose missionary work took them to India and Kenya, builds on hitherto unpublished manuscripts to create a compelling and surprising narrative. The personal details of each woman 's life unfold against the dramatic backdrop of world events. Both women, born at the end of the Great War, navigate the end of British rule and bear witness to the complicated birth of postcolonialism in their respective postings. The vivid details of their accounts bring this period alive, revealing new aspects of what it was like to be an English woman of faith in the new India and the new Kenya.” Professor Charlotte Gordon, Distinguished Professor of Humanities, Endicott College, Beverley, Massachusetts “Two Sisters by Sara Ashencaen Crabtree explores the lives and work of Audrey and Muriel Chalkely, sisters who lived out their vocation as `Methodist missionaries in South India and Kenya respectively. The book is built around interviews and documentary resources (principally letters) which give a rich account of the sisters’ motivations, experiences and daily lives as young women who trained and worked as nurses in the North of England in the immediate post-war years and later, following their calling as medical missionaries… This book will be of great interest both to students of the Methodist Missionary movement, and the development of nursing and midwifery in the commonwealth. It furthermore offers a uniquely rich insight into the spiritual motivation of two women whose names are still held in high regard in the Indian and African communities in which they served.” Revd. Professor Peter Draper, Retired Professor of Nursing Education at the University of Hull


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