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Re-membering the soul of the nurse: A cultural and archetypal study.

The nurse is central to healthcare and has always been the most prominent figure in times of vulnerability throughout the life cycle. This dissertation attempts to recover the complexity and wholeness of the nurse by tracing her origins as far back as Neolithic times. Ancient mythology, folklore, literature, art, and popular culture are explored to reveal the multifaceted characteristics of the nurse. Specific images are expanded to deepen understanding of the nurse archetype. / The nurse image holds longing, ambivalence, fear, desire, and vulnerability. Mythology, metaphor, and symbol are drawn upon to recover the soul of the nurse, revealing new insights, forgotten memories, and devalued capacities. Idealizing or demonizing the nurse is an attempt to break free of her power. The nurse is often portrayed as dangerous and mysterious because she is so close to the archetypal energies of death and eros. The nurse's body cares for the bodies of others. Nurses are drawn to work that is messy, peculiar, and unpredictable, thus the work of the nurse is soul work. The soul longs for complexity. The nurse craves intensity, merging, and collaboration. Like Baubo, she affirms life while maintaining an understanding of the brutal frankness and wonder of the life cycle. Her true body consciousness is Dionysian. / Over time the image of the nurse has been split into one-dimensional disguises ranging from the angelic heroine to the sex object. Without moralizing or dividing the good from the bad, the author---a nurse---investigates the dynamic energy of the nurse archetype and discusses what has been lost through splits, repressions, and distortions. This study reveals why the nurse captivates culture and maintains the status as the most trusted professional in society, questioning what it would take to re-member her comprehensive wholeness.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:CHENGCHI/U0003475572
CreatorsRobinson, Elizabeth Ann.
PublisherPacifica Graduate Institute.
Source SetsNational Chengchi University Libraries
Detected LanguageEnglish
Typetext
RightsCopyright © nccu library on behalf of the copyright holders

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