Jasmine Lovey
Master of Arts / Geschichte UNIFR
jasmine.lovey@unifr.ch
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4368-1438
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Doktorand_in SNF,
Abteilung Medizin
PER 17 bu. 135
Ch. du Musée 18
1700 FribourgPER 17, 135
- Geschichte des 19. Schweizerischen Jahrhunderts
- Gesundheit- und Kindheitsgeschichte
- Geschichte der ledigen Mütter
Biografie
Nach einem Bachelor und Master in Geschichte und Latein an der Universität Freiburg, interessiert sich Jasmine Lovey für die Geschichte der ärtzlichen Behandlungen von Kindern während des 19. Jahrhunderts in der französischen Schweiz. Ihr Dissertationsprojekt ist Teil des SNF Projekts von Dr. Dr. Felix Rietmann : Raising a Well-Grown Child: Media and Material Cultures of Child Health in the Early Nineteenth Century.
Vorlaüfiger Titel der Dissertation : Prévenir et soigner. Entre promotions et résistances aux soins médicaux des enfants au XIXe siècle en Suisse romande
Forschung und Publikationen
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Publikationen
5 Publikationen
LOVEY Jasmine, Figures de la mère célibataire en Valais (1929-1970) : entre assistance publique, perceptions sociales et enjeux économiques , in Thierry Delessert, Chiara Boraschi, Nelly Valsangiacomo (dir.), Pauvres, immorales et contraintes. Les adversités des mères célibataires en Suisse, Genève/Zurich : Seismo, collection Question de genre
Jasmine Lovey (2024) | BuchkapitelFeitknecht Regula, Lovey Jasmine, Vocational Training and Education in the Library and Information Professions in Switzerland: An Overview and Some Reflections , in Innovative Instruments for Community Development in Communication and Education
Jasmine Lovey (2021) | Buchkapitel -
Forschungsprojekte
Raising a Well-Grown Child: Media and Material Cultures of Child Health in the Early Nineteenth Century
Status: AbgeschlossenBeginn 01.06.2021 Ende 31.05.2025 Finanzierung SNF Projektblatt öffnen The project investigates material and media cultures of child health in German-speaking Europe and French-speaking Switzerland from the late 18th to the 19th centuries — a period of major changes in medicine, society, and childhood. The project focuses on three distinct levels of analysis. The first level examines representations of health and illness in childhood in the first German 'popular' periodicals such as the Pfennig-Magazin (1833-1855), the Illustrirte Zeitung (1843-1869), and Der Deutsch Jugendfreund (1846-1857). In a first publication, it could show that conversations in these periodicals engaged in media-specific ways with notions of health and illness in childhood partly setting a cultural counterpoint to medical ideas. The second level investigates the material culture of child health, notably the development and use of ‘health technologies’ such as the birthing bed, the cradle, and the corset. It shows that this evolving material culture of child health provides an intriguing site for rethinking our historical accounts of the rise of public health and modern medicine. The third level (notably, the PhD-thesis by Jasmine Lovey) explores the social history of pediatrics and public health in French-speaking Switzerland focusing on the history of smallpox vaccination. Overall, the project advances new perspectives in the history of child health and medicine through a study of material culture and cultural and medical practices. Additionally, the exploration of early periodicals and literary representations contributes to an interdisciplinary exchange between literary studies, media history and the history of medicine.