Book contents
- Frontmatter
- CONTENTS
- Acknowledgements
- List of Contributors
- List of Figures
- Introduction: Picturing Women's Health
- 1 Sensibility and Good Health in Charlotte Smith's Ethelinde
- 2 Amazonian Fashions: Lady Delacour's (Re)Dress in Maria Edgeworth's Belinda
- 3 Transforming the Body Politic: Food Reform and Feminism in Nineteenth-Century Britain
- 4 Stagnation of Air and Mind: Picturing Trauma and Miasma in Charlotte Brontë's Villette
- 5 The Iconography of Anorexia Nervosa in the Long Nineteenth Century
- 6 Kate Marsden's Leper Project: On Sledge and Horseback with an Outcast Missionary Nurse
- 7 Constructs of Female Insanity at the Fin de Siècle: The Lawn Hospital, Lincoln, 1882–1902
- 8 The Fitness of the Female Medical Student, 1895–1910
- 9 Unstable Adolescence/Unstable Literature? Managing British Girls' Health around 1900
- NOTES
- Index
6 - Kate Marsden's Leper Project: On Sledge and Horseback with an Outcast Missionary Nurse
- Frontmatter
- CONTENTS
- Acknowledgements
- List of Contributors
- List of Figures
- Introduction: Picturing Women's Health
- 1 Sensibility and Good Health in Charlotte Smith's Ethelinde
- 2 Amazonian Fashions: Lady Delacour's (Re)Dress in Maria Edgeworth's Belinda
- 3 Transforming the Body Politic: Food Reform and Feminism in Nineteenth-Century Britain
- 4 Stagnation of Air and Mind: Picturing Trauma and Miasma in Charlotte Brontë's Villette
- 5 The Iconography of Anorexia Nervosa in the Long Nineteenth Century
- 6 Kate Marsden's Leper Project: On Sledge and Horseback with an Outcast Missionary Nurse
- 7 Constructs of Female Insanity at the Fin de Siècle: The Lawn Hospital, Lincoln, 1882–1902
- 8 The Fitness of the Female Medical Student, 1895–1910
- 9 Unstable Adolescence/Unstable Literature? Managing British Girls' Health around 1900
- NOTES
- Index
Summary
The 1892 travel memoir by missionary nurse Kate Marsden, On Sledge and Horseback to the Outcast Siberian Lepers, is at first glance a remarkable testimony to Marsden's 2,000 mile, ten-month journey across Russia and Siberia and back. The events Marsden narrates are so incredible, in fact, that since the time of the text's publication, readers have questioned its truthfulness. After the Siberian journey and the publication of the memoir, Marsden enjoyed a brief period of fame in England and beyond, winning the approval of luminaries including Queen Victoria, W. T. Stead and the Empress of Russia. But rumours surrounding her work, particularly the management of the money she collected for her leper hospital and challenges to the veracity of the memoir soon eclipsed her celebrity status. Furthermore, the memoir's mixing of genres, changing objectives and focalizations all encode a textual version of the same unreliability that came to haunt Marsden's character and reputation. I will turn later, and briefly, to the contested afterlife of Marsden's memoir and the decline of her reputation, as what concerns this essay is the memoir itself. The prolific and contradictory objectives, voices and identities that constitute Marsden's memoir command attention beyond their likely exaggerations. Rather than consider Marsden alone in accounting for the memoir's textual incongruities, I relate them to the contradictory values and objectives of professional Victorian nursing as well.
Marsden's journey, she explains early in the text, was inspired by her experience as a nurse in the Russo-Turkish War of 1877, where she was first acquainted with the ‘ravages’ of leprosy. While in Constantinople and Tiflis she heard ‘reports’ of a Siberian herb that was said to ‘alleviate the sufferings caused by leprosy, and in some cases, to remove the disease’.
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- Information
- Picturing Women's Health , pp. 105 - 118Publisher: Pickering & ChattoFirst published in: 2014