Jean H. Baker

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Jean H. Baker


Born
in Baltimore, Maryland, The United States
February 09, 1933

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Jean H. Baker is a professor of history at Goucher College. A graduate of Goucher College, she earned her doctorate at Johns Hopkins University.

Average rating: 3.79 · 4,064 ratings · 424 reviews · 27 distinct worksSimilar authors
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Mary Todd Lincoln: A Biography

3.94 avg rating — 1,588 ratings — published 1987 — 16 editions
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Sisters: The Lives of Ameri...

3.80 avg rating — 374 ratings — published 2005 — 6 editions
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Margaret Sanger: A Life of ...

3.54 avg rating — 263 ratings — published 2011 — 8 editions
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Votes for Women: The Strugg...

3.79 avg rating — 47 ratings — published 2002 — 6 editions
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The Stevensons: A Biography...

3.50 avg rating — 14 ratings — published 1996 — 6 editions
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Building America: The Life ...

3.78 avg rating — 9 ratings — published 2019 — 5 editions
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Affairs of Party: The Polit...

3.33 avg rating — 9 ratings — published 1983 — 8 editions
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Ambivalent Americans: The K...

liked it 3.00 avg rating — 1 rating — published 1977
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Women and the U.S. Constitu...

liked it 3.00 avg rating — 1 rating — published 2008
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“women were considered instinctual nurses in this generation—the field had received exciting publicity during the Spanish-American War when an Army Nursing Corps had served overseas in the Philippines. Clara Weeks-Shaw, the author of a popular textbook on nursing, promoted the field as “a new activity for women—congenial, honorable and remunerative and with permanent value to them in the common experience of domestic life.”3 In readable language, Weeks-Shaw presented nursing as an artful balance between self-reliance and submission. Overall its practices were an extension of maternity, requiring the classic female behaviors of cheerfulness (to the patients) and obedience (to the doctors). “Never leave a doctor alone with a gynecology patient except at his request,” went one injunction.”
Jean H. Baker, Margaret Sanger: A Life of Passion

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