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War's Waste : Rehabilitation in World War I America - Beth Linker
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War's Waste

Rehabilitation in World War I America

By: Beth Linker

Paperback | 26 February 2014 | Edition Number 1

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In World War I America, disabled soldiers became known as war's waste," refuse left in the wake of modern warfare. Emboldened by their faith in the ability of the new social and medical sciences to solve problems of economic and cultural inefficiencies, progressive reformers believed that the government could (and should) rebuild war cripples" through programs of physical rehabilitation. Beth Linker brings to vivid life the physical consequences of war by examining maimed soldiers and the medical professionals who set up programs for their recovery. She reveals how, over the course of WWI, the campaign to rehabilitate injured soldiers gained widespread appeal among reformers and policy makers, which translated into the creation of the Veteran's Bureau in 1921 (later the VA) and policies that continue to affect disabled soldiers today.
After the Civil War, the U.S. government provided pensions for injured veterans and a lifetime of medical care in soldiers' homes, which allowed them to withdraw from the labor market. The WWI-era rehabilitation campaigns instead sought to get disabled soldiers back to work despite their injuries through what was often depicted as a kind of remasculinization process. The rise of orthopedics, physiotherapy, prosthetics, and the modern army hospital are seen here for the first time as part of an ideological and policy backlash against the costly Civil War veterans pension system. This story is compellingly told from the point of view of politicians, reformers, physicians, therapists, and the wounded soldiers themselves.
Industry Reviews
"Linker has deftly and expertly woven together numerous historical strands to produce an important book deserving of a wide readership." (Isis) "This pathbreaking study opens up exciting avenues for future research." (American Historical Review) "Erudite and gracefully written.... Linker explores the cultural, political, and medical meanings ascribed to the rehabilitation of disabled soldiers and veterans during the World War I era.... At a time when thousands of American veterans from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan struggle with disability and rehabilitation, the cultural, political, and institutional foundations of their care-and its inadequacies-deserve this special attention." (Journal of American History)"

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