Description

Book Synopsis
The National Health Service has provided Britain’s healthcare since 1948. This institution has been the subject of tense political debate since its inception and has undergone a number of complex reforms and restructures. But the meanings of the NHS are not only – or even primarily – lived out in politics. Nearly every Briton comes into contact with the NHS – from cradle to grave – and this system of healthcare shapes society, culture and everyday life. This book charts these multiple meanings, looking at the NHS as a site of work, activism and consumerism, as a space and in cultural representations. Looking in these ways, the book shows how and why the NHS has become a symbol of Britishness and an object of fierce protectiveness, even love, today.

Trade Review

'This is the first book to address the NHS using a cultural studies framework. It produces rich and complex evidence of change over time across popular attachments and social meanings and attitudes, while demonstrating the value of new approaches to visual and material sources.'
Stephanie Snow, Professor of Health, History and Policy, University of Manchester

-- .

Table of Contents

Introduction – Jennifer Crane and Jane Hand
Part I: Work
1 The making of ‘NHS staff’ as a worker identity, 1948–85 – Jack Saunders
2 Sick notes are a waste of time: doctors’ labour and medical certification at the birth of the NHS – Gareth Millward
Part II: Activism
3 ‘Loving’ the NHS: social surveys and activist feelings – Jennifer Crane
4 The everyday work of hospital campaigns: public knowledge and activism in the UK’s National Health Services – Ellen Stewart, Kathy Dodworth and Angelo Ercia
Part III: Consumerism
5 Consuming health? Health education and the British public in the 1980s – Alex Mold
6 Customers who don’t buy anything!: the introduction of free dispensing at Boots the Chemists – Katey Logan
Part IV: Space
7 The cultural significance of space and place in the NHS – Angela Whitecross
8 ‘Bright-while-you-wait’? Waiting rooms and the National Health Service, c. 1948–58 – Martin D. Moore
Part V: Representation
9 Representation of the NHS in the arts and popular culture – Mathew Thomson
10 ‘If it hadn’t been for the doctor, I think I would have killed myself’: ensuring adolescent knowledge and access to healthcare in the age of Gillick – Hannah Elizabeth
Part VI: International
11 ‘A spawning of the nether pit’? Welfare, warfare and American visions of Britain’s National Health Service, 1948–58 – Roberta Bivins
Epilogue: ‘I’m afraid [,] there’s no NHS’ – Sally Sheard
Index

Posters, Protests, and Prescriptions: Cultural

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    A Hardback by Jennifer Crane, Jane Hand

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      View other formats and editions of Posters, Protests, and Prescriptions: Cultural by Jennifer Crane

      Publisher: Manchester University Press
      Publication Date: 07/06/2022
      ISBN13: 9781526163462, 978-1526163462
      ISBN10: 1526163462

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      The National Health Service has provided Britain’s healthcare since 1948. This institution has been the subject of tense political debate since its inception and has undergone a number of complex reforms and restructures. But the meanings of the NHS are not only – or even primarily – lived out in politics. Nearly every Briton comes into contact with the NHS – from cradle to grave – and this system of healthcare shapes society, culture and everyday life. This book charts these multiple meanings, looking at the NHS as a site of work, activism and consumerism, as a space and in cultural representations. Looking in these ways, the book shows how and why the NHS has become a symbol of Britishness and an object of fierce protectiveness, even love, today.

      Trade Review

      'This is the first book to address the NHS using a cultural studies framework. It produces rich and complex evidence of change over time across popular attachments and social meanings and attitudes, while demonstrating the value of new approaches to visual and material sources.'
      Stephanie Snow, Professor of Health, History and Policy, University of Manchester

      -- .

      Table of Contents

      Introduction – Jennifer Crane and Jane Hand
      Part I: Work
      1 The making of ‘NHS staff’ as a worker identity, 1948–85 – Jack Saunders
      2 Sick notes are a waste of time: doctors’ labour and medical certification at the birth of the NHS – Gareth Millward
      Part II: Activism
      3 ‘Loving’ the NHS: social surveys and activist feelings – Jennifer Crane
      4 The everyday work of hospital campaigns: public knowledge and activism in the UK’s National Health Services – Ellen Stewart, Kathy Dodworth and Angelo Ercia
      Part III: Consumerism
      5 Consuming health? Health education and the British public in the 1980s – Alex Mold
      6 Customers who don’t buy anything!: the introduction of free dispensing at Boots the Chemists – Katey Logan
      Part IV: Space
      7 The cultural significance of space and place in the NHS – Angela Whitecross
      8 ‘Bright-while-you-wait’? Waiting rooms and the National Health Service, c. 1948–58 – Martin D. Moore
      Part V: Representation
      9 Representation of the NHS in the arts and popular culture – Mathew Thomson
      10 ‘If it hadn’t been for the doctor, I think I would have killed myself’: ensuring adolescent knowledge and access to healthcare in the age of Gillick – Hannah Elizabeth
      Part VI: International
      11 ‘A spawning of the nether pit’? Welfare, warfare and American visions of Britain’s National Health Service, 1948–58 – Roberta Bivins
      Epilogue: ‘I’m afraid [,] there’s no NHS’ – Sally Sheard
      Index

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