1st Edition

Sophia Jex-Blake A Woman Pioneer in Nineteenth Century Medical Reform

By Shirley Roberts Copyright 1993
    224 Pages
    by Routledge

    220 Pages
    by Routledge

    Sophia Jex-Blake led the campaign that won for British women the right to enter the medical profession. Before taking up this cause she had studied women's education in England, Germany and the United states, and rejected the popular contemporary view that higher education would be wasted on women. Her medical crusade in Britain resulted in women's rights to professional careers and financial independence being more widely accepted.
    After years of extensive lobbying, she founded the London School of Medicine for Women in 1874 and two years later, largely due to her efforts, legislation was passed enabling women to take qualifying examinations in medicine. Shirley Roberts shows Sophia Jex-Blake to have been a determined and resourceful pioneer, skilful in winning over both public and political opinion. But she was also an impetuous and at times tactless woman, who could provoke hostility, as well as loyalty. Sophia Jex-Blake is a fascinating account of one woman's struggle for equality.

     Table of events Introduction 1. Childhood in Sussex 2. The student in London 3. The student abroad 4. A change of direction 5. The Edinburgh campaign begins 6. A disputed prize and a students' riot 7. The battle moves to the law courts 8. The end of the Edinburgh campaign 9. 'The time for a reform has come' 10. The years in practice 11. The return to Sussex Bibliography Index

    Biography

    Shirley Roberts (Author)