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Correction| Volume 53, ISSUE 1, P53-54, January 2005

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      CORRECTION

      In the article by Nelson S, Gordon S, The rhetoric of rupture: Nursing as a practice with a history? (Nurs Outlook 2004;52:255-61), the reference list was incorrectly numbered. The following reference list is numbered to correctly correspond to the references as they are cited in the text of the article.

      Thompson EP. The making of the English working class. Harmondsworth: Penguin. 1963. p. 13.

      Buresh B, Gordon S. From silence to voice. Ithaca: Cornell University Press; 2000.

      Gordon S, Nelson, S. An end to angels and hearts. Moving beyond the virtue script to a knowledge-based identity for nurses. Amer J Nurs (in press).

      Freidson E. The profession of medicine: A study of the sociology of applied knowledge. Chicago: University of Chicago Press; 1988. p. 13.

      Lown B. The lost art of healing. Ballantine Books; 1999. p. xvii.

      Office of Admissions, University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing. People shaping the professional. University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing undergraduate overview. 2001.

      MetroWest Community Health Care Foundation. Nurse power. Framingham: MetroWest Community Health Care Foundation; 2003. Available at: www.nursepower.net.

      Branch MA. The New Nurses Special Issue. Graduate and Professional Edition. Yale School Nurs. Alumni Mag 1999. p. 48-51.

      Kimball B, O'Neill E. Healthcare human crisis: The American nursing shortage. A study commissioned by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, 2001.

      Freudenheim M. As nurses take on primary care, physicians are sounding alarms. The New York Times. 1997; September 30: A1, D4.

      Gordon S. S. Gordon interviews with US nursing leadership 2000-1.

      Sandelowksi M. Devices and desires: Gender and technology in American nursing. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press; 2000; p. 90.

      Nightingale to Henry Manning, July 1852, BL Add. MSS. 9095/10, British Library.

      Jones C. The charitable imperative: Hospital and nursing in Ancien Regime and Revolutionary France. London: Routledge, 1989.

      Jones C. The construction of the hospital patient in early modern France. In: Finzsch N, Jutte R, eds. Institutions of confinement. Cambridge University Press; 1996. p. 55-74.

      Nelson S. Entering the professional domain, the making of the modern nurse in 17th century France. Nurs Hist Review 1999;7:171-88.

      Summers A. The cost and benefits of caring: Nursing charities, c. 1830-1860. In: Barry J, Jones C, eds. Medicine and charity before the welfare state. London: Routledge; 1991. p. 133-48.

      McCalman J. Sickness and suffering. Melbourne: Melbourne University Press; 1998. p. 43-5.

      Buhler-Wilkerson K. No place like home: a history of nursing and home care in the United States. Baltimore: John Hopkins Press; 2000. p. 129, 131.

      Doherty MK. The life and times of Royal Prince Alfred Hospital. Sydney, Australia: Russell RL, ed. Glebe: New South Wales College of Nursing; 1996. p. 123, 124.

      Fairman J, Lynaugh J. Critical care nursing: a history. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press; 1998.

      Risse G. Mending bodies, saving souls: A history of hospitals. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 1999.

      Gordon S. Life support: Three nurses on the front lines. Boston: Little, Brown and Co.; 1996.

      Lynaugh J, Brush B. American nursing: From hospitals to health systems. Malden: Blackwell; 1996.

      Dickens C. The life and adventures of Martin Chuzzlewit. Harmondsworth: Penguin; 1968.

      Summers A. The mysterious demise of Sarah Gamp: The domiciliary nurse and her detractors, c.1830-1860. Victorian Studies 1989;Spring:365-86.

      Dingwall R, Allen D. The implications of healthcare reforms for the profession of nursing. Nursing Inquiry 2001;8:64-74.

      Melosh B. "The physician's hand": Work culture and conflict in American nursing. Philadelphia: Temple University Press; 1982.

      Davies C. Gender and the professional predicament in nursing. Bristol: Open University Press; 1995.

      Florence Nightingale to Lady Cranworth, 22 February 1856, fol. 93b, Add. MSS. 43397, British Library.

      Nightingale F. Notes on Nursing. What it is and what it is not. New York: Dover; 1969.

      Summers A. Angels and citizens. British women as military nurses 1854-1914. London: Routledge; 1988.

      Baly M. Florence Nightingale and the nursing legacy. London: Croom Helm; 1986.

      Nelson S. "Say little, do much." Nursing, nuns and hospitals in the nineteenth century. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press; 2001. p. 78.

      Baly M. The Nightingale nurses: the myth and the reality. In: Maggs C, ed. Nursing history: The state of the art. London: Croom Helm; 1987. p. 33-59.

      Maggs C. The origins of general nursing. London: Croom Helm; 1983.

      Abel-Smith B. A history of the nursing profession. London: Heinemann; 1960.

      Reverby S. A legitimate relationship: Nursing, hospitals, and science in the twentieth century. In: Baer ED, D'Antonio P, Rinker S, Lynaugh J, eds. Enduring issues in American nursing. New York: Springer; 2001. p. 262-81.

      References

      1. Thompson EP. The making of the English working class. Harmondsworth: Penguin. 1963. p. 13.

      2. Buresh B, Gordon S. From silence to voice. Ithaca: Cornell University Press; 2000.

      3. Gordon S, Nelson, S. An end to angels and hearts. Moving beyond the virtue script to a knowledge-based identity for nurses. Amer J Nurs (in press).

      4. Freidson E. The profession of medicine: A study of the sociology of applied knowledge. Chicago: University of Chicago Press; 1988. p. 13.

      5. Lown B. The lost art of healing. Ballantine Books; 1999. p. xvii.

      6. Office of Admissions, University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing. People shaping the professional. University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing undergraduate overview. 2001.

      7. MetroWest Community Health Care Foundation. Nurse power. Framingham: MetroWest Community Health Care Foundation; 2003. Available at: www.nursepower.net.

      8. Branch MA. The New Nurses Special Issue. Graduate and Professional Edition. Yale School Nurs. Alumni Mag 1999. p. 48-51.

      9. Kimball B, O'Neill E. Healthcare human crisis: The American nursing shortage. A study commissioned by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, 2001.

      10. Freudenheim M. As nurses take on primary care, physicians are sounding alarms. The New York Times. 1997; September 30: A1, D4.

      11. Gordon S. S. Gordon interviews with US nursing leadership 2000-1.

      12. Sandelowksi M. Devices and desires: Gender and technology in American nursing. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press; 2000; p. 90.

      13. Nightingale to Henry Manning, July 1852, BL Add. MSS. 9095/10, British Library.

      14. Jones C. The charitable imperative: Hospital and nursing in Ancien Regime and Revolutionary France. London: Routledge, 1989.

      15. Jones C. The construction of the hospital patient in early modern France. In: Finzsch N, Jutte R, eds. Institutions of confinement. Cambridge University Press; 1996. p. 55-74.

      16. Nelson S. Entering the professional domain, the making of the modern nurse in 17th century France. Nurs Hist Review 1999;7:171-88.

      17. Summers A. The cost and benefits of caring: Nursing charities, c. 1830-1860. In: Barry J, Jones C, eds. Medicine and charity before the welfare state. London: Routledge; 1991. p. 133-48.

      18. McCalman J. Sickness and suffering. Melbourne: Melbourne University Press; 1998. p. 43-5.

      19. Buhler-Wilkerson K. No place like home: a history of nursing and home care in the United States. Baltimore: John Hopkins Press; 2000. p. 129, 131.

      20. Doherty MK. The life and times of Royal Prince Alfred Hospital. Sydney, Australia: Russell RL, ed. Glebe: New South Wales College of Nursing; 1996. p. 123, 124.

      21. Fairman J, Lynaugh J. Critical care nursing: a history. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press; 1998.

      22. Risse G. Mending bodies, saving souls: A history of hospitals. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 1999.

      23. Gordon S. Life support: Three nurses on the front lines. Boston: Little, Brown and Co.; 1996.

      24. Lynaugh J, Brush B. American nursing: From hospitals to health systems. Malden: Blackwell; 1996.

      25. Dickens C. The life and adventures of Martin Chuzzlewit. Harmondsworth: Penguin; 1968.

      26. Summers A. The mysterious demise of Sarah Gamp: The domiciliary nurse and her detractors, c.1830-1860. Victorian Studies 1989;Spring:365-86.

      27. Dingwall R, Allen D. The implications of healthcare reforms for the profession of nursing. Nursing Inquiry 2001;8:64-74.

      28. Melosh B. "The physician's hand": Work culture and conflict in American nursing. Philadelphia: Temple University Press; 1982.

      29. Davies C. Gender and the professional predicament in nursing. Bristol: Open University Press; 1995.

      30. Florence Nightingale to Lady Cranworth, 22 February 1856, fol. 93b, Add. MSS. 43397, British Library.

      31. Nightingale F. Notes on Nursing. What it is and what it is not. New York: Dover; 1969.

      32. Summers A. Angels and citizens. British women as military nurses 1854-1914. London: Routledge; 1988.

      33. Baly M. Florence Nightingale and the nursing legacy. London: Croom Helm; 1986.

      34. Nelson S. "Say little, do much." Nursing, nuns and hospitals in the nineteenth century. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press; 2001. p. 78.

      35. Baly M. The Nightingale nurses: the myth and the reality. In: Maggs C, ed. Nursing history: The state of the art. London: Croom Helm; 1987. p. 33-59.

      36. Maggs C. The origins of general nursing. London: Croom Helm; 1983.

      37. Abel-Smith B. A history of the nursing profession. London: Heinemann; 1960.

      38. Reverby S. A legitimate relationship: Nursing, hospitals, and science in the twentieth century. In: Baer ED, D'Antonio P, Rinker S, Lynaugh J, eds. Enduring issues in American nursing. New York: Springer; 2001. p. 262-81.

      Linked Article

      • The rhetoric of rupture: Nursing as a practice with a history?
        Nursing OutlookVol. 52Issue 5
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          In this paper we argue that nursing is consistently presented as a practice without a history, constantly reinventing itself within new professional and technical realms. This rupture with and repudiation of a past deemed to be pejorative, coupled with a rebirth in a “preferred present,” raises recurrent problems in the construction of nursing's contemporary professional identity and search for social legitimacy. Furthermore, constituting new nursing knowledge and practice as discontinuous with the past produces a sense of historical dislocation of that nursing knowledge and practice that, in turn, reproduces the need for relocation through reinvention.
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