{"id":18874,"date":"2020-04-01T11:00:05","date_gmt":"2020-04-01T15:00:05","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/?p=18874"},"modified":"2021-07-23T13:23:01","modified_gmt":"2021-07-23T17:23:01","slug":"f-is-for-false-noses-a-dose-of-humor-from-joyce-dennys","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/2020\/04\/01\/f-is-for-false-noses-a-dose-of-humor-from-joyce-dennys\/","title":{"rendered":"F is for False Noses: A Dose of Humor from Joyce Dennys"},"content":{"rendered":"
By Krista Stracka ~<\/em><\/p>\n When times get tough, a much-needed laugh can cut through the stress and fears that accompany uncertainty. But for those cooped up with a prankster on this April Fools\u2019 Day, look out!<\/p>\n The soldiers and civilians who endured the First World War often used humor to offset the terror they experienced and to bolster morale while tackling the challenges of the war. One charming example was donated to the National Library of Medicine in 2014.<\/p>\n Prefaced with a faux plate that reads \u201cNot to be taken seriously,\u201d the satirical Alphabet Our Hospital Anzac British Canadian<\/em><\/a>,1916 shows amusing scenes in a WWI hospital, delightfully illustrated by Joyce Dennys<\/a> (1893\u20131991) with accompanying verses by Hampden Gordon and M.G. Tindall.<\/p>\n The rhymes are clever, but the witty illustrations attract the most attention. The subdued palette in each full-page lithograph is inspired by the uniforms of the hospital\u2019s cast of expressive characters: the soldier patients, the trained medical staff, and the civilian volunteers like the proud boy scout<\/a> and even the artist herself as a VAD nurse<\/a>. After studying at Exeter Art School, Dennys continued on to London but left her studies soon after the war broke to aid in the national effort as a member of the British Voluntary Aid Detachment<\/a> (VAD), first in general service and later as a nurse. According to the Royal Albert Memorial Museum (RAMM<\/a>), the book was a \u201cproduct of all-night painting sessions\u201d by Dennys and the composition of verses by \u201cher \u2018protector and friend\u2019 fellow nurse Mary Tindall.\u201d<\/p>\n Beneath the light-hearted fa\u00e7ade, these verses and illustrations quietly draw attention to the common challenges experienced by the VAD nurses who performed difficult and dangerous work for no pay aside from a small stipend. The trained nurses often gave the VADs a hard time, reluctant to work alongside<\/a> amateurs who had little training beyond a short certificate program in first aid, home nursing, and hygiene. With a strong sense of purpose and very little time off, the VADs carried out their nursing assistant duties in addition to cleaning. Absent from the pages is the darkest reality. In caring for their soldier patients, trained and voluntary nurses alike risked their own lives<\/a> as they were exposed to the infections and diseases from the trench and later to the Spanish Flu<\/a>. Many, like Dennys\u2019s friend Mary G. Tindall<\/a>, paid the ultimate price. Tindall died a year after this book was published from an illness contracted while treating patients.<\/p>\n Despite the war, Dennys did not lose her wry sense of humor. She went on to create more humorous works during and after the war, she wrote plays for both adults and children, and displayed her artwork in galleries. In 1919, she married Dr. Thomas Cann Evans, who served as a major in the Australian Medical Corps. Her new role as a doctor\u2019s wife came with a strict code of conduct and likely felt familiar to the innumerable rules<\/a> she was required to follow during her days as a VAD. Armed with her signature wit, she channeled her thoughts on these unique social demands<\/a> and often unrealistic expectations into the satirical three-part Mrs. Dose series. In 2006, Dr. William H. Helfand<\/a> donated two editions of the first book, Mrs. Dose, the Doctor\u2019s Wife: a Book on False Nosery<\/em><\/a>, to the National Library of Medicine. This new cast of characters is no less amusing than those of the hospital in her earlier work, all of whom are navigating how (or if) to physically wear the \u201cFalse Nose\u2026firmly fixed to her face\u201d that came with their wedding ring.<\/p>\n<\/a>
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