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About this book
With US soldiers stationed around the world and engaged in multiple conflicts, Americans will be forced for the foreseeable future to come to terms with those permanently disabled in battle. At the moment, we accept rehabilitation as the proper social and cultural response to the wounded, swiftly returning injured combatants to their civilian lives. But this was not always the case, as Beth Linker reveals in her provocative new book, War's Waste.
Linker explains how, before entering World War I, the United States sought a way to avoid the enormous cost of providing injured soldiers with pensions, which it had done since the Revolutionary War. Emboldened by their faith in the new social and medical sciences, reformers pushed rehabilitation as a means to "rebuild" disabled soldiers, relieving the nation of a monetary burden and easing the decision to enter the Great War. Linker's narrative moves from the professional development of orthopedic surgeons and physical therapists to the curative workshops, or hospital spaces where disabled soldiers learned how to repair automobiles as well as their own artificial limbs. The story culminates in the postwar establishment of the Veterans Administration, one of the greatest legacies to come out of the First World War.
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Yes, you can access War's Waste by Beth Linker in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in History & North American History. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
Information
Publisher
University of Chicago PressYear
2011Print ISBN
9780226143354, 9780226482538eBook ISBN
9780226482552Table of contents
- Cover
- Copyright
- Title Page
- Contents
- Introduction: The Roots of Rehabilitation
- 1. The Problem of the Pensioner
- 2. Reconstructing Disabled Soldiers
- 3. A New Female Force
- 4. Maximalist Medicine at Walter Reed
- 5. The Limb Lab and the Engineering of Manly Bodies
- 6 Propaganda and Patient Protest
- 7. Rehabilitating the Industrial Army
- Epilogue: Walter Reed, Then and Now
- Acknowledgments
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index