Abstract

Numerous studies have provided numerical portraits of some of the difficulties of women physicians at work in a field that traditionally has been the preserve of men. These studies, like much of recent feminist literature, often focus on the tension between maintaining a career and being a wife and mother. They usually provide aggregate data but fail to convey compellingly the nuances and emotions involved in the issues they address. Perri Klass's recent novel, Other Women's Children, the center point of this article, provides a case study of the thoughts and feelings attached to the issues addressed by the scientific inquiries. The book deals with the experiences of a woman pediatrician in a Boston hospital, a woman who uncertainly juggles her career and family responsibilities.

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