Cronin Monica
Geoffrey Kaye Museum of Anaesthetic History, 630 St Kilda Rd, Melbourne, Australia.
J Anesth Hist. 2020 Jun;6(2):90-95. doi: 10.1016/j.janh.2018.10.004. Epub 2018 Nov 3.
On 8 March 2018, the Geoffrey Kaye Museum of Anaesthetic History launched its latest exhibition in an online format, The Rare Privilege of Medicine: Women Anaesthetists in Australia and New Zealand. The launch was deliberately timed to coincide with International Women's Day which carried the theme of "Press for Progress." These women's stories reveal them to have been champions for progress, as well as having the potential to be inspirational beacons of progress for the future, thereby fitting easily into the theme. This article highlights the stories of Dr. Janet Greig and Dr. Lily Jörgensen, two women featured within the exhibition. Other women are also represented, as their stories provide some degree of context to the two featured women, even though there is no evidence to suggest that they did significant work in anesthesia practice. However, this article should not be considered biographical in nature. Instead, it operates within a distinct theoretical perspective, examining the way in which historians research and interpret the past. It also considers the exhibition research, and the exhibition itself, to be a launch point for more nuanced work in this area.
2018年3月8日,杰弗里·凯伊麻醉历史博物馆以在线形式推出了其最新展览《医学的罕见特权:澳大利亚和新西兰的女性麻醉师》。此次展览的推出特意选在以“推动进步”为主题的国际妇女节期间。这些女性的故事表明她们是进步的倡导者,也有可能成为未来进步的鼓舞人心的灯塔,因此很契合这一主题。本文重点介绍了展览中的两位女性——珍妮特·格雷格博士和莉莉·约根森博士的故事。展览中还呈现了其他女性,她们的故事为这两位重点介绍的女性提供了一定的背景信息,尽管没有证据表明她们在麻醉实践方面有重大贡献。然而,本文本质上不应被视为人物传记。相反,它从一个独特的理论视角出发,审视历史学家研究和解读过去的方式。它还将展览研究及展览本身视为该领域更细致入微的研究工作的起点。