Description
This series of workshops and events arises from a Royal Society of Edinburgh collaborative workshops award of £8,261.Caroline Verdier is CI on the project co-lead with Dr Jacqueline Jenkinson from the University of Stirling.
This project intends to stimulate research on the timely subject of civilian war trauma via a case study of female Belgian refugees in Scotland 1914-18. ‘Shell shock’ during that conflict is overwhelmingly associated with male frontline soldiers. Few academic studies consider the impact of warfare on female well-being (Poynter, 2008, McEwen, 2006) particularly on the health of female civilians (Grayzel, 2014). Among Scotland’s c. 20,000 wartime Belgian refugees were dozens who applied for poor law assistance, a preliminary analysis of these by the PI indicated 40% of female and 25% of male Belgian refugee applicants were diagnosed as suffering ‘insanity’, yet they presented with symptoms of trauma. Project outcomes will be a co-authored article, and outlining plans for a digital research resource of Belgian refugee medical case histories combining a diffuse range of primary sources.
Period | 1 Feb 2017 → 31 Jan 2018 |
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Degree of Recognition | International |
Keywords
- Belgian
- Trauma
- Refugees
- WW1
- Women
- History
Related content
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Research output
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War trauma among Belgian refugee women in Scotland in the First World War
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
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Activities
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Mediating Emotion, Making Trauma: Doctors, Patients and the Construction of Shell-Shock in First World War Britain
Activity: Participating in or organising an event types › Organiser of special symposia
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Settlement, treatment and employment of French-speaking Belgian refugees in France, the Netherlands, England and Scotland
Activity: Participating in or organising an event types › Organiser of special symposia
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Tracing First World War Belgian Refugees in Scotland
Activity: Participating in or organising an event types › Organiser of special symposia