Beth Linker


Selected Publications

"Feet for Fighting: Locating Disability and Social Medicine in First World War America"
Social History of Medicine 20, no. 1 (April 2007): 91-109.
“Resuscitating the ‘Great Doctor’: The Career of Biography in Medical History”
In Thomas Söderqvist, ed., The History and Poetics of Scientific Biography(Aldershoot: Ashgate Press, 2007): 221-239

“Strength and Science: Gender, Physiotherapy, and Medicine in Early Twentieth Century America”

This essay explores the development of post-World War I allied medical professions in the United States, and more specifically the rise of physiotherapy as it was used to rehabilitate maimed soldiers. I argue that unlike other female health care professionals of the time, physiotherapists engaged in intragender conflicts with white-collar women rather than attempting to gain independence from medical men. Driven to be distinct from other female professionals, physiotherapists created a unique post-Victorian identity, defining their practice as requiring both strength and science, which challenged the convention of seeing women as the weaker, more nurturing sex. Their story, however, is not one of simple triumph. Eager to medicalize and professionalize their field, by 1935 they subordinated themselves to physician supervision, losing what little professional autonomy they had acquired during the 1920s. Yet by extending their professional sphere of influence over disabled soldiers, these therapists became physical manipulators of the male body and purveyors of knowledge regarding the definition and treatment of disability.






Find Authors