conference abstract & program book
TRANSCRIPT
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85 T H ANNUAL MEETING
CONFERENCE ABSTRACT & PROGRAM BOOK
APRIL 26 - 29, 2012
The Baltimore Marriott Inner Harbor Hotel at Camden Yards
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The AAHM 2012 LAC would like to thank the following at
Johns Hopkins University for their generous support of this year’s meeting:
Edward D. Miller, CEO of Johns Hopkins Medicine; Dean, School of Medicine
Ronald R. Peterson, President of The Johns Hopkins Hospital and Health System
The Institute of the History of Medicine
Office of Cultural Affairs
The Johns Hopkins University Press
We would also like to offer special thanks for their assistance:
Joseph Dieter, Department of Art as Applied to Medicine
Office of Continuing Medical Education
&
Baltimore Marriott Inner Harbor at Camden Yards Hotel
Radisson Plaza Lord Baltimore Hotel
COVER IMAGE:
Modified version of the Antikamnia Calendar 1901 (Oct-Dec.). Chromo-lithograph from water-
color by Dr. Louis Crusius (1862-1898). Dr. Crusius, creator of many clever and humorous
medical images, was a graduate of the St. Louis College of Pharmacy in 1882 and the St. Louis
College of Physicians and Surgeons in 1890, and on the faculty in histology at the Marion Sims
Medical College, a precursor to the St. Louis University Medical Department. Antikamnia
("Opposed to Pain") Chemical Company of St. Louis, Missouri produced several calendars
(1897-1901) with art by Dr. Crusius, promoting their patent medicines to physicians. Courtesy of
the Institute of the History of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University
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AAHM AMERICAN ASSOCIATION FOR THE HISTORY OF MEDICINE
OFFICERS
President (2010-2012)
JOHN EYLER, PhD
4609 Gustafson Drive, NW, Gig Harbor, WA 98335 <[email protected]>
Vice President (2010-2012)
NANCY TOMES, PhD
59 Soundview Avenue, East Northport, NY 111731 <[email protected]>
Secretary
JODI L. KOSTE, MA
Tompkins-McCaw Library for the Health Sciences, Special Collections and Archives, Virginia
Commonwealth Univ., Box 980582,Richmond,VA 23298 <[email protected]>
Treasurer
MARGARET MARSH, PhD
Executive Dean, Rutgers University, Faculty of Arts and Sciences - Camden, 311 N. 5th
St.,
Camden, NJ 08102 <[email protected]>
Immediate Past President
W. BRUCE FYE, M.D., M.A.
Prof. of Medicine & Medical History, Mayo Clinic, 200 First St. SW, Rochester, MN 55905
Councilors - term ends 2013
David Barnes, PhD
David Jones, PhD, MD
Susan Jones, PhD, DVM
Wendy Kline, PhD
Councilors - term ends 2014
Julie Fairman, PhD, RN, FAAN
Richard C. Keller, PhD
Elizabeth Watkins, PhD
Stephanie Brown-Clark, MD, PhD
Councilors - term ends 2012
Carla Keirns, MD, PhD
Gerald Oppenheimer, MPH, PhD
Heather Prescott, PhD
Sarah Tracy, PhD
2012 Annual Meeting
Program Committee
Jole Shackelford, Chair
James Bono
Thomas Broman
Steven Caspar
Erika Dyck
Marta Hanson
Brian Nance
Rennie Schoepflin
2012 Annual Meeting
Local Arrangements Committee
Randall Packard, Chair
Christine A. Ruggere
Eliza Hill
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AAHM AMERICAN ASSOCIATION FOR THE HISTORY OF MEDICINE
PROGRAM
APRIL 26 - 29, 2012
THURSDAY, APRIL 26
Noon - 7:00 PM REGISTRATION - LOBBY
12:30 - 7:00 PM AAHM Council Meeting - UNIVERSITY 1-2
7:00 - 9:00 PM OPENING RECEPTION - ABC EAST
9:00 - 10:00 PM Historians of Psychiatry Discussion Group - B & O RAILROAD
FRIDAY, APRIL 27
7:00 - 8:30 AM CONTINENTAL BREAKFAST - THE YARD RESTAURANT
7:00 - 8:30 AM President’s Breakfast for New Members - STADIUM 1
7:00 - 8:30 AM Bulletin of the History of Medicine Advisory Committee - STADIUM
2
7:00 AM - 5:00 PM REGISTRATION - MARRIOTT LOBBY
9:00 AM - 5:30 PM BOOK EXHIBITION - WEST DEF
8:30 - 10:00 A.M WELCOME & PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS - ABC EAST
JOHN EYLER, University of Minnesota
Small is Beautiful: American Epidemiology in the 1930s
10:00 – 10:15 AM BREAK - PREFUNCTION FOYER
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10:15 - 11:45 AM CONCURRENT SESSIONS: A1, A2, A3, A4, A5
A1: Race and Public Health Practices - SALON ABC Moderator: DAVID S. JONES, Harvard University, Cambridge MA, USA
TOMOMI KINUKAWA, University of the Pacific, Stockton CA, USA Health Disparity and the Ideological Construction of “Illegal” Immigrants: The Case of Korean
Diaspora Communities in Japan, 1930-1990.
EVAN HART, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati OH, USA
Women's Health Redefined: The National Black Women's Health Project and “Wholistic” Health
STEPHEN MAWDSLEY, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK
Research Divided: Racial Segregation and the Testing of a Polio Preventative, 1952
A2: The Politics of Medical Contraception and Abortion - EAST BALLROOM Moderator: LESLIE REAGAN, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champagne IL, USA
LARA FRIEDENFELDS, Independent Scholar, Chatham NJ, USA
The Historical Development of Modern Distinctions between Contraception and Early Abortion
ALICIA PUGLIONESI, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore MD, USA
“Your Whole Effort Has Been to Create Desire”: Reproducing Knowledge and Evading
Censorship in the Nineteenth-Century Subscription Press
A3: Disability and Public Representation - UNIVERSITY 1-2 Moderator: BETH LINKER, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia PA, USA
MOLLY LADD-TAYLOR, York University, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
“Somewhat Retarded”: Justifying Sterilization in the 1970s
WALTON SCHALICK, Central Wisconsin Center; Univ. of Wisconsin, Madison WI, USA
“Soapland Symbols”: Disability and American Radio, 1920-60
LISA PRUITT, Middle Tennessee University, Murfreesboro TN, USA
The “Crippled” Child and the State in the Progressive Era
A4: Medical Bacteriology - UNIVERSITY 3-4 Moderator: JACOB STEERE-WILLIAMS, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis MN, USA
STEVEN PALMER, University of Windsor, Windsor, Ontario, Canada
Havana in the Atlantic Circulation of Pastorian Culture
REBECCA KAPLAN, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco CA, USA
“Before You Drink a Glass of Milk”: Brucellosis Disease Control and the Relationship of Animal
and Human Health in the United States, 1920-1940
EVA ÅHRÉN, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda MD, USA
Science and Sanitation: Microbiology and Public Health at the Hygienic Laboratory of the Marine
Hospital Service, 1887-1899
A5: British Medicine in Colonial Context - STADIUM 4 Moderator: GEOFF HUDSON, Northern Ontario School of Medicine, Thunder Bay, Ontario, Canada
ANOUSKA BHATTACHARYYA, Harvard University, Cambridge MA, USA
Beyond the Insane: Examining the Asylum Community of British India 1858-1912
SHANG-JEN LI, Academia Sinica, Taipei, Taiwan
British Military Medicine in the Second Opium War
MONICA AYHENS, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa AL, USA
Grounds of Authority: Eighteenth-Century British Military and Naval Medicine and West Indian Identit
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Noon - 1:00 PM LUNCH SESSION
F1: Medical Images in the History of Medicine - STADIUM 1
Convener: PHOEBE EVANS LETOCHA, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore MD, USA
Discussant: BERNADETTE WEGENSTEIN, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore MD, USA
Discussant: DAN O'CONNOR, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore MD, USA
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Notes ______________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________
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1:15 - 2:45 PM CONCURRENT SESSIONS: B1, B2, B3, B4, B5
B1: Negotiating Genetic Diseases - SALON ABC
Moderator: NEAL HOLTAN, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis MN, USA
SOFIYA GRACHOVA, Harvard University, Cambridge MA, USA
“A Phenotypic Hereditary Disorder”: Russian Physicians “Discover” Tay-Sachs Disease (1906-1933)
ANDREW HOGAN, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia PA, USA
The Changing “Look” of Disease: From Patients to Banding Patterns in Medical Genetics
JUDITH FRIEDMAN, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda MD, USA
From Pedigrees to Populations: How a Shift in Genetic Perspective Helped to Obscure Observations
of Anticipation in Hereditary Disease
B2: Midwifery and Medicalization - EAST BALLROOM Moderator: JUDY LEAVITT, University of Wisconsin, Madison WI, USA
SIMONE CARON, Wake Forest University, Winston Salem NC, USA
“It's Been a Long Road”: Midwives in Rhode Island, 1890-1990
WENDY KLINE, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati OH, USA
The Bowland Bust and the Criminalization of Traditional Midwifery in California
GWENITH CROSS, Wilfrid Laurier University, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada
“Need Our Mothers Die?” Canadian Concerns about Maternal Mortality in the Interwar Years
B3: Medical Photography - UNIVERSITY 1- 2 Moderator: JOHN HARLEY WARNER, Yale University, New Haven CT, USA
STEPHEN GREENBERG, National Library of Medicine, Bethesda MD, USA
Ink and Silver: Medicine, Photography, and the Printed Book
SHAUNA DEVINE, Duke University, Durham NC, USA
Science, Disease and Representation: Medical Photography during the American Civil War, 1861-1865
EMILY WILSON, National Museum of Health and Medicine, Silver Spring MD, USA
Ex Utero: Live Human Fetal Experimentation and the Films of Davenport Hooker, 1932-1963
B4: Understanding Heart Disease - STADIUM 4 Moderator: TODD OLSZEWSKI, Providence College, Providence RI, USA
SEJAL PATEL, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda MD, USA
Methods and Management: NIH Administrators, Federal Oversight, and the Framingham Heart Study
CARA KIERNAN FALLON, Harvard University, Cambridge MA, US
How Can We Help Our Husbands? Understanding the Silence on Heart Disease and Women
SUZANNE JUNOD, U.S. Food and Drug Administration, Washington DC, USA
The Heart's Holy Grail: Prosthetic Heart Valves, 1952-1980
B5: Health Care Delivery in Colonial Settings - UNIVERSITY 3-4 Moderator: RANDALL PACKARD, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore MD, USA
OSNAT GELBART, Ben Gurion University, Beer Sheva, Israel; URI AVIRAM, Hebrew University,
Jerusalem, Israel; SHIFRA SHVARTS, Ben Gurion University, Beer Sheva, Israel
The Development of Mental Health Services in the Jewish Community in Pre-State Israel during the
British Mandate Period (1917-1948)
JIM CONNOR, Memorial University of Newfoundland, St. Johns, Newfoundland, Canada;
JENNIFER CONNOR, Memorial University of Newfoundland, St. Johns, Newfoundland, Canada
Medicine at the Crossroads of the North Atlantic: Health, Place, and Region in Pre-Confederation
Newfoundland
SAM RAJ NESAMONY, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, India
Medical Education in Colonial India: The London Missionary Society and Neyoor Medical Mission, 1838-1947
2:45 - 3:00 PM BREAK - PREFUNCTION FOYER
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3:00 - 4:30 PM CONCURRENT SESSIONS: C1, C2, C3, C4, C5
C1: Racial Degeneration and Eugenics - SALON ABC Moderator: JOHANNA SCHOEN, Rutgers University, New Brunswick NJ, USA
LESLIE BAKER, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada
“The Clearing House for Mental Defectives”: Compulsory Education, Physician
Involvement and Medical Surveillance in Nova Scotia's Eugenic Plan
MICHAEL BROWN, University of Roehampton, London, UK
Medicine, Mechanism and Masculinity: Social Darwinism and the Anxieties of Late Victorian Empire
AMY SAMSON, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada
Social Workers, Guidance Clinics and Eugenics in Alberta, 1930-1960
C2: Care of Mothers and Children - EAST BALLROOM Moderator: RIMA APPLE, University of Wisconsin, Madison WI, USA
ABBY GOLDMAN, Duke University, Durham NC, USA
The Right to Be Safely Born: the Emergency Maternity and Infant Care Program and
America's Experiment with Single Payer Maternal and Child Healthcare, 1944-1950
ANDREW RUIS, University of Wisconsin, Madison WI, USA
“Children with Half-Starved Bodies” and the Development of Public Health Nutrition in the United States, 1890-1950
RICHARD MECKEL, Brown University, Providence RI, USA
No Free Lunch: The Underfed and Malnourished Child and the Progressive Era Origin of the
“American Plan” for School Feeding
C3: Museums and Representation of Health and Healing - UNIVERSITY 1-2 Moderator: HEIDI KNOBLAUCH, Yale University, New Haven CT, USA
THOMAS STELLER, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore MD, USA
Exhibiting Hygienic Knowledge in the U.S.: The Transatlantic Network of the Deutsches
Hygiene-Museum in the 1930s
JAMES CURLEY, National Museum of Health and Medicine, Silver Spring MD, USA
Experiencing and Exchanging Pathology: Making the International Association of Medical Museums
KATHERINE KEIRNS, Princeton University, Princeton NJ, USA; CARLA KEIRNS, Stony Brook
University, Stony Brook NY, USA; PETER DASHKOFF, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook NY
Television Doctors and the Medical Profession: From Portrayals of Heroism to Human Frailty, 1960-2011
C4: Vaccination - UNIVERSITY 3 & 4 Moderator: DAYLE DELANCEY, University of Wisconsin, Madison WI, USA
ELENA CONIS, Emory University, Atlanta GA, USA
Mumps Vaccine and the Making of a “Deadly Health Sin”
C. MICHELE THOMPSON, Southern Connecticut University, New Haven CT, USA
The Social and Political Impact of Smallpox on the Reign of the Last Independent Emperor of Vietnam, 1847-83.
SEAN PHILLIPS, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame IN, USA
Pox in the Pulpit: The Catholic Church and the Propagation of the Smallpox Vaccine in France, 1804-1824
C5: Public Health in the Colonial Caribbean - STADIUM 4
Moderator: ABENA DOVE OSSEO-ASARE, University of California Berkeley, Berkeley CA, USA
DEBBIE McCOLLIN, University of the West Indies, St. Augustine, Trinidad and Tobago
The Best and Worst of Times: World War II and Public Health in Trinidad and Tobago
LOVERNE JACOBS-BROWNE, University of the Southern Caribbean, St, Joseph, Trinidad & Tobago
Environmental Crises and their Impact on Public Health in St. Vincent 1898-1903
TERENCIA KYNEATA JOSEPH, Univ. of the Southern Caribbean, St. Joseph, Trinidad &Tobago
“In Sickness and in Health ... ’Till Death Do Us Part.” The Labour Crisis, Indian Indentured
Immigrants and Health Concerns, 1859-1900
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4:45 -5:30 PM Board buses at front of Marriott Hotel
for Johns Hopkins Medical Campus
6:00 -7:15 PM FIELDING H.GARRISON LECTURE
SUSAN REVERBY, Wellesley College
Enemy of the People, Enemy of the State:
Two Great(ly Infamous) Doctors in the Court of History
Auditorium, Wood Basic Science Building
Johns Hopkins School of Medicine
7:15 - 9:00 PM RECEPTION
Institute of the History of Medicine/Welch Library
8:15 - 9:15 PM Board buses to return to the Marriott Hotel
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7:00 AM - 5:00 PM REGISTRATION - LOBBY
7:00 - 8:30 AM CONTINENTAL BREAKFAST - THE YARD RESTAURANT
7:00 - 8:30 AM Women Historians Breakfast - CHESAPEAKE ROOM
7:00 - 8:30 AM Clinician/Historians Breakfast - STADIUM 2
9:00 AM - 5:00 PM BOOK EXHIBITION - WEST DEF
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8:30 - 10:00 AM CONCURRENT SESSIONS: D1, D2, D3, D4, D5
D1: Race and Psychiatry - - STADIUM 1 Moderator: ELLEN DWYER, Indiana University, Bloomington IN, USA
DENNIS DOYLE, St. Louis College of Pharmacy, St. Louis MO, USA
Community Psychiatry Comes to Harlem Hospital: Community Mental Health and the Legacy
of the Long Civil Rights Movement, 1942-1965
MARTIN SUMMERS, Boston College, Chestnut Hill, MA, USA
The Government Hospital for the Insane and African-American Perceptions of the State
in Post-Reconstruction Washington, D.C.
LAURIE B. GREEN, University of Texas, Austin TX, USA
From Malnourished Babies to Impaired Adults: Representing Hunger, Race, and Mental Health during
the War on Poverty
D2: Medical Education and Women - EAST BALLROOM
Moderator: ARLEEN TUCHMAN, Vanderbilt University, Nashville TN, USA
CARRIE ADKINS, University of Oregon, Eugene OR, USA
“Gentlemen’s Daughters,” “Womanly Women,” and “Hen Medics”: Class, Gender,
and Medical Education in the United States, 1870-1920
GLEN COOPER, Brigham Young University, Provo UT, USA
Book-Learning and Medicine in 12-C. Byzantium: Anna Comnena and the Physicians
D3: Professional and Lay Medical Strategies - STADIUM 5 Moderator: MARTA HANSON, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore MD, USA
LORI JONES, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
Scholarly Medical Advice vs. Social Practices against Contagion in 15th- and 16th-century England:
Proscriptive, Reflective, or Neither?
HE BIAN, Harvard University, Cambridge MA, USA
From Erudition to Simplicity: Re-Reading Practical materia medica in Late Imperial China
MEEGAN KENNEDY, Florida State University, Tallahassee FL, USA
Writing the Profession: Tabular Narrative in 18th- and 19th-Century British Case Histories
D4: Disease Ætiology in Environmental Context - UNIVERSITY 1 -2 Moderator: NATHAN CROWE, Arizona State University, Tempe AZ, USA
JANET GREENLEES, Glasgow Caledonian University, Glasgow, UK
What Makes a Factory Healthy? A Case Study of Lancashire, England, 1880-1939
MEAGHAN MARIAN, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada
The Devil's Other Playground: Reviewing Hong Kong's Role in the History of Tropical Medicine
STEPHANIE STEGMAN, Independent Scholar, Fort Worth TX, USA
From Data Set to Bullet Point: Diabetes Surveys among American Indians, 1940-1965
D5: Global Health and Demographics - UNIVERSITY 3-4
Moderator: JEREMY GREENE, Harvard University, Cambridge MA, USA
CASEY HURRELL, Queen’s University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada
Securing the Peace via “The Rallying Point of Unity”: The Rockefeller Foundation, UNRRA
and the Evolution of International Health Work, 1939-1948
KAVITA SIVARAMAKRISHNAN, Columbia University, New York NY, USA
Where Worlds Meet: Population Aging and the Making of a Global Agenda (1940s-2000)
ELISA CAMPOS, Faculdade de Ciências Médicas, Lisboa, Portugal
A Biography of Lipoproteins: Between Fundamental Research and Clinical Practice
10:00 - 10:15 AM BREAK - PREFUNCTION FOYER
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10:15 - 11:45 AM CONCURRENT SESSIONS: E1, E2, E3, E4, E5
E1: Therapeutic Grouping and Group Therapeutics - STADIUM 5
Moderator: TULLEY LONG, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, USA
TERI CHETTIAR, Northwestern University, Evanston IL, USA
The Family as the Irreducible “Unit of Mental Health Treatment”: Social Psychiatry and the
Emergence of Family and Marital Therapy in Post-WWII Britain
JESSICA PARR, University of New South Wales, Sydney NSW, Australia
The Group Approach to Reducing Fat: Obesity and the Emergence of Self-Help Groups
for Weight Loss in the Postwar United States
HOWARD KUSHNER, Emory University, Atlanta GA, USA
Cesare Lobroso, Robert Hertz, and the Pathology of Left-Handedness
E2: Our Bodies, Our Choices: The Language of Choice and Patient Responsibility - STADIUM 1
Moderator: ELIZABETH WATKINS, University of California San Francisco, CA, USA
ALEX MOLD, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, London, UK
The Agony of Choice: Patient Organisations, Consumerism and Choice in Britain since the 1960s
ELIZABETH TOON, University of Manchester, Manchester, UK
“It's Your Breast and Your Life”: Mastectomy, Consent and Agency in 1970s Britain
JENNA HEALEY, Yale University, New Haven CT, USA
Rejecting Reproduction: The National Organization for Non-Parents and Reproductive
Rights Activism in 1970s America
E3: Institutional History Through Oral Histories - EAST BALLROOM Moderator: JOHN SWANN, Food and Drug Administration, Silver Spring MD, USA
ELLEN MORE, University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worchester MA, USA
Oral history, Institutional Memory, and the Meaning of Primary Care: Family Medicine vs.
Community Medicine in the History of Academic Medicine
DOMINIQUE TOBBELL, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis MN, USA
“Coming to Grips with the Nursing Question”: The Politics of Nursing Education Reform in 1960s and 1970s America
LAURA STARK, Wesleyan University, Middletown CT, USA
Knowing the “Normals”: Oral Histories of Healthy Volunteers in Clinical Research at NIH, 1953-1983
E4: Disciplining Staph - UNIVERSITY 1-2 Moderator: GEORGE WEISZ, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada
CHRISTOPH GRADMANN, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway
Standardizing Resistance. The WHO and Antibiotic Sensitivity Testing 1950-1975
FLURIN CONDRAU, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland
Reframing Hospital Infections: Staphylococcus aureus, Influenza and the Community in Britain 1930-1960
MARTHA GARDNER, Massachusetts College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences, Boston MA, USA
Throwing the Baby out with the Infection? Weighing the Use of Hexachlorophene in the
Emerging Neonatal Intensive Care Units (NICUs), 1960-1977
E5: Medical Practice in the 19th Century - UNIVERSITY 3-4 Moderator: MARGARET HUMPHREYS, Duke University, Durham NC, USA
CATHERINE THOMPSON, University of Connecticut, Storrs CT, USA
The Drs. Williams of Deerfield, Massachusetts: Private Practice in the Early U.S. Republic
SHELDON GOSLINE, University College London, London, UK
Mapping Itinerant Physicians with Digital Newspaper Archives: An Ingenious Approach to
Reconstructing Medical Schedules
ROBERT KIRK, University of Manchester, Manchester, UK; NEIL PEMBERTON,
University of Manchester, Manchester, UK
Sense and Sensibility: The Leech as a Medical Companion in the Nineteenth-Century Bloodletting Encounter
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Noon - 1:00 PM CONCURRENT LUNCH SESSIONS
S1: History of Aids in the American South - UNIVERSITY 1-2
Convener: STEPHEN INRIG, University of Texas Southwestern School of Medicine, Dallas TX, USA
Obstacles to Effective AIDS Outreach in the American South: Lessons from North Carolina
JESSICA WAPNER, Independent Scholar, New York NY, USA
Historical Linkages between Poverty and HIV in the American South
LISA BIAGIOTTI, Independent Scholar, USA
Close to Home: HIV in America’s Rural South
S2: Bridging the Gap Between History and Policy - STADIUM 2
Convener: STEPHANIE SNOW, University of Manchester, Manchester UK, USA
Discussant: ALEX MOLD, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, UK
Discussant: NANCY TOMES, Stony Brook University (SUNY), Stony Brook, NY, USA
Discussant: JULIE FAIRMAN, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia PA, USA
Noon - 1:00 PM GRADUATE STUDENT LUNCH - Alewife
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1:15 - 2:45 PM CONCURRENT SESSIONS: F1, F2, F3, F4, F5
F1: Race and Quarantine - EAST BALLROOM Moderator: DAVID BARNES, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia PA, USA
PAUL LOMBARDO, Georgia State University, Atlanta GA, USA
Public Health in a Time of War: Contagion, Quarantine, and the Peril of “Dago Yellow Fever”
GUENTER RISSE, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco CA, USA
Politics of Disgust, Stigma and Exclusion: The San Francisco Pesthouse
POWEL KAZANJIAN, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor MI, USA
Frederick Novy and the 1901 San Francisco Plague Commission: Significance for Early
Bacteriology in American Medicine
F2: Medical Authority, the Medical Profession, and the State - UNIVERSITY 1-2 Moderator: JANET GOLDEN, Rutgers University, Camden NJ, USA
MARTHA HILDRETH, University of Nevada Reno, Reno NV, USA
Remedies for a Troubled Profession: Deontological Conduct Codes and French Practitioners of the Fin-de-Siècle
NICOLAS HENCKES, CNRS-CERMES3, Villejuif, France
Making Public Assistance Fit Medicine. The Conseil Superieur de l'Assistance Publique
and the Reform of Psychiatric Care in France, 1880-1939
STEPHANIE SNOW, University of Manchester, Manchester, UK
New Paradigms, New Practices: The Development and Implementation of a National
Stroke Strategy in the UK, 1990s-2000s
F3: Presenting and Representing the Body in Early Modern Medicine - UNIVERSITY 3-4
Moderator: JACKIE DUFFIN, Queen’s University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada
ALLEN SHOTWELL, Indiana University, Bloomington IN, USA
Inflation, Injection and the Tasting of Human Flesh: Specialized Techniques of Dissection
and the Organization of Anatomy in the Early Sixteenth Century
LUCIA DACOME, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Bodies, Instruments, and the Visual Culture of Early Modern Medicine
CARIN BERKOWITZ, Chemical Heritage Foundation, Philadelphia PA, USA
Knowledge Claims, Authorship, and Aesthetics in the Anatomical Atlases of Enlightenment Britain
F4: Influenza and Tuberculosis - STADIUM 1 Moderator: JOHN EYLER, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis MN, USA
SARAH SAVAGE, University of Southern Mississippi, Hattiesburg MS, USA
“The City that Care Forgot”: Defiance of the Law in New Orleans during the Spanish Influenza Epidemic of 1918
MARK HONIGSBAUM, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland
“A Sense of Dread is Very General”: The Spanish Flue, the Northcliffe Press, and
Stoicism on the British Home Front in WWI
RACHEL CORE, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore MD, USA
Tuberculosis Control in Shanghai before the Work Unit: 1930s and 1940s Treatment and Outreach
F5: Medicine, Mental Health, and the Urban Setting - STADIUM 5 Moderator: JENNIFER GUNN, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis MN, USA
JORIS VANDENDRIESSCHE, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Leuven, Belgium
Medical Science in the City: The Scientific Infrastructure and Urban Embedment of
Medical Societies in Belgium, 1820-1850
EDMUND RAMSDEN, University of Exeter, Exeter, UK
Stress in the City: Social Science, Mental Health, and Urban Planning in Post-War America
GRAHAM MOONEY, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore MD, USA
Race, Poverty, and Primary Care before Medicaid: The Baltimore Medical Care Plan, 1948-66
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2:45 - 3:00 PM BREAK - PREFUNCTION FOYER
3:00 - 4:30 PM CONCURRENT SESSIONS: G1, G2, G3, G4, G5
G1: The Post-Mortem Body - EAST BALLROOM Moderator: STEPHEN CASPER, Clarkson University, Potsdam NY, USA
KELLY AREHART, The College of William and Mary, Williamsburg VA, USA
“To Put a Mass of Putrefying Animal Matter into a Fine Plush Casket ...” Sympathy,
Sanitation and Science, 1880-1920
JIM DOWNS, Connecticut College, New London CT, USA
Dying to Be Free: The Bodies of Former Slaves after the American Civil War
ROSS JONES; WARWICK H. ANDERSON, University of Sydney, Sydney NSW, Australia
Wandering Anatomists and Itinerant Anthropologists: The Antipodean Sciences of Race
in Britain between the Wars
G2: Medicine and the End of Life - UNIVERSITY 1-2 Moderator: LISA BOULT, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore MD, USA
HAROLD BRASWELL, Emory University, Atlanta GA, USA
A Faithful Betrayal: Autonomy and the Problem of Medical Technology in the U.S. Hospice
Movement, 1970-1978
ELLEN VAN REULER, University of Manchester, Manchester, UK
The Relationship between Palliative Care and Euthanasia: A Comparison of the
Developments in England and the Netherlands during the Post War Period
CARLA KEIRNS, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook NY, USA
Life Histories, Health Disparities and Conflict at the End of Life, 1960-2010
G3: Medieval Medicine and Religion - STADIUM 1 Moderator: JAMES BONO, University at Buffalo (SUNY), Buffalo NY, USA
WINSTON BLACK, University of Tennessee, Knoxville TN, USA
Between Paradise and Pain in Late Medieval Physiology: William of Auvergne
(1180-1249) and the Medicalization of Eden
NICOLE ARCHAMBEAU, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena CA, USA
God Helps Those Who Help Themselves: Complicating the Place of Miracles in the
Hierarchy of Resort in Fourteenth-Century Provence
YAN LIU, Harvard University, Cambridge MA, USA
Power of Words: Incantatory Healing in Medieval China
G4: Iatrogenic Therapies and Public Health Interventions - UNIVERSITY 3-4 Moderator: HAROLD J. COOK, Brown University, Providence RI, USA
ITAI BAVLI, Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel; SHIFRA SHVARTS, Ben Gurion
University Beer Sheva, Israel
Michael Reese's Pandora's Box
AYA BAR OZ, Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel; SHIFRA SHVARTS, Ben Gurion
University, Beer Sheva, Israel
The Construction of Ethno-Medical Identity: The “Mizrahi” Ringworm Case in Israel
MARK LARGENT, Michigan State University, East Lansing MI, USA
Reye's Syndrome and the Invention of a Public Health Triumph
G5: Research and Practice in British and Canadian Medical Education - STADIUM 5 Moderator: PETER KERNAHAN, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis MN, USA
JONATHAN REINARZ, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, West Midlands, UK
Places of Science: The Emergence of the Laboratory in English Provincial Medical Schools, c.1825-1920
ARIEL ZIMERMAN, Bar Ilan University, Ram Gan, Israel
“To Shut Up or Put Up” - Canadian Medical Activism and the Beginnings of Evidence Based Medicine
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SATURDAY, APRIL 28
5:00 - 6:30 PM BUSINESS MEETING - EAST BALLROOM
6:00 - 6:40 PM Board buses at front of Marriott Hotel
for Engineers Club/Garrett Jacobs Mansion
7:00 - 8:00 PM RECEPTION - Engineers Club/Garrett Jacobs Mansion
8:00 PM Board buses to return to Marriott Hotel
8:00 PM BANQUET - Engineers Club/Garrett Jacobs Mansion
10:00 - 11:00 PM Board buses to return to Marriott Hotel
SUNDAY, APRIL 29
7:00 - 8:30 AM CONTINENTAL BREAKFAST - THE YARD RESTAURANT
7:00 - 8:15 AM Post-Mortem Breakfast for Annual Meeting Organizers - CHESAPEAKE ROOM
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8:30 - 10:00 AM CONCURRENT SESSIONS: H1, H2, H3, H4, H5
H1: Psychology and the Medicalization of Personality - WEST BALLROOM Moderator: DAVID HERZBERG, University at Buffalo (SUNY), Buffalo NY, USA
DEBORAH DOROSHOW, Yale University, New Haven CT, USA
The Space Child's New Home: The Invention of the Emotionally Disturbed Child in
Mid-Twentieth-Century America
WEN SHEN, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco CA, USA;
EMILY WATKINS, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco CA, USA
Revising the Myth of the “Surgical Personality”: Recognition of Fear, Stress, and Doubt in Surgery, 1970s-Present
H2: Medicine and Public Health at Johns Hopkins - EAST BALLROOM Moderator: WARWICK ANDERSON, University of Sydney, Sydney NSW, Australia
KAREN KRUSE THOMAS, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore MD, USA
“One of the Most Favorable Places in the World to Study Public Health”: Cooperation and Conflict between
the Baltimore City Health Department and the Johns Hopkins School of Hygiene and Public Health
SUSAN LAMB, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada
“Freud has Opened the Eyes of the Physician”: Adolf Meyer's Importation and Appropriation
of Psychoanalysis at the Johns Hopkins Hospital, 1913-1917
MIRIAM REUMANN, University of Rhode Island, Kingston RI, USA
“Nothing More Than a Normal Boy”: Sex, Science, and Johns Hopkins Medical Students in the 1920s
H3: Disease and Doctors in Artistic Representation - UNIVERSITY 1-2 Moderator: MARY FISSELL, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore MD, USA
KATHERINE FOXHALL, King’s College London, London, UK
Nineteenth-Century Men of Science and the “Authentic” Art of Migraine Aura
KEREN HAMMERSCHLAG, King’s College London, London, UK
The Limitations of Looking in Paintings of Medical Examinations, 1900-1910
DOUGLAS JAMES, King’s College London, London, UK
Scarring Images: A Reconsideration of Some Eighteenth-Century Smallpox Portraiture
H4: Public Health Epistemologies - UNIVERSITY 3-4 Moderator: SUSAN REVERBY, Wellesley College
LAURA BOTHWELL, Columbia University, New York NY, USA
The People's Science: How Social, Economic, and Political Contexts Shaped the Rise
of the Randomized Controlled Trial
DAVID ROSNER, Columbia University, New York NY, USA; GERALD MARKOWITZ,
City University of New York, New York NY, USA
With the Best of Intentions
MERLIN CHOWKWANYUN, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia PA, USA
“We're Tired of being Guinea Pigs”: Postwar Mining and Environmental Health Risks (1950-1990)
H5: Colonial Medical Propaganda and Decolonization - SALON ABC Moderator: CHRISTOPHER CRENNER, University of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas City KS, USA
JOHN DIMOIA, National University of Singapore, Singapore
Historicizing the Biological Sample in the South Korean Anti-Parasite Campaigns
JANE KIM, University of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles CA, USA
Fearing the Imperialist Aggressor and its Germs: The North Korean Propagandas on U.S.
Biological Warfare in North Korea during the Korean War, 1950-1953
DANIEL GOLDBERG, East Carolina University, Greenville NC, USA
Somaticism, Pain, and Malingering among North Carolina Civil War Veterans: An Analysis
of Two Early Pension Programs
10:00 - 10:15 AM BREAK - PREFUNCTION FOYER
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10:15 - 11:45 AM CONCURRENT SESSIONS: I1, I2, I3, I4, I5
I1: Race and the Constitution of (Mental) Disease - WEST BALLROOM Moderator: MARTIN PERNICK, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor MI, USA
MARCIA MELDRUM, University of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles CA, USA; FELICA
JONES, Healthy; BOWEN CHUNG, UCLA-Harbor Biomedical Institute, Torrance CA, USA;
African-American Families, Los Angeles CA, USA
Partners in Care: Mental Health Researcher and Community Negotiations in Millennium Los Angeles
CAROLYN ROBERTS, Harvard University, Cambridge MA, USA
Melancholia in the Middle Passage: British Surgeons, African Slaves, and the Politics of Diagnosis
in the Slave-Trade Debates, 1789-1792
JULIA CUMMISKEY, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore MD, USA
“A Special Baltimore Problem”: Race and Tuberculosis in the Age of Antibiotics
I2: Recovering Patient Experiences - EAST BALLROOM Moderator: DEBORAH LEVINE, Providence College, Providence RI, USA
SANDRA EDER, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland
“A Recording Instrument of Uncertain and Variable Powers.” Marginality and the Modern Patient Record
AIMEE MEDEIROS, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco CA, USA
Short Children and Long Hours: 19th-Century Roots of the Modern Stigmatization of Short
Stature and the Medicalization of Height
JENNIFER BUREK PIERCE, University of Iowa, Iowa City IA, USA
Light and Letters: The Convalescence of Marjorie McVicker Sutcliffe, 1930-1948
I3: Medieval and Early Modern Disease Representation - UNIVERSITY 1-2 Moderator: ANN CARMICHAEL, Indiana University, Bloomington IN, USA
MICHAEL STOLBERG, University of Würzburg, Würzburg, Germany
Images and Metaphors of Cancer in the Pre-Modern era (ca. 1500-1850)
GABRIELLE BARR, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore MD, USA
England's Answer to God's Scourge
CHRISTINE BOECKL, University of Nebraska, Kearney NE, USA
Scientific Information Gained by Decoding a Fifteenth-Century Leprosy Scene
I4: Medicine and the Law - UNIVERSITY 3-4 Moderator: LISA O’SULLIVAN, New York Academy of Medicine, New York, NY, USA
NICHOLAS DUVALL, University of Manchester, Manchester, UK
“I Cannot Say This Offers Positive Proof”: A Case Study for the Use of Laboratory
Techniques in Forensic Medicine in 1930s Scotland
DAVID SCHUSTER, Indiana University-Purdue University Fort Wayne, Fort Wayne IN, USA
Lawyers, Doctors, and Newspapers: Triangulating the Meaning of Insanity during the 1870s
HEATHER VARUGHESE, Yale University, New Haven CT, USA
Physicians Reforming Themselves or Being Reformed? Legislation, Lawsuits, and the 80-hour
Week in U.S. Graduate Medical Education
I5: Quacks and Cancer - SALON ABC Moderator: DAVID CANTOR, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda MA, USA
LAURA DAWES, Australian National University, Canberra ACT, Australia
“Just a Quack Who Can Cure Cancer” John Braund and Regulating Cancer Treatment in America
ERIC BOYLE, National Museum of Health and Medicine, Silver Spring MD, USA
Quack Medicine and the Effort to Combat Health Fraud in Modern America
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Adkins , Carrie – 10
Åhrén, Eva – 4
Anderson, Warwick H. – 14
Archambeau, Nicole – 14
Arehart, Kelly – 14
Aviram, Uri – 6
Ayhens, Monica – 4
Baker, Leslie – 7
Bar Oz, Aya – 14
Barr, Gabrielle – 17
Bavli, Itai – 14
Berkowitz, Carin – 13
Bhattacharyya, Anouska – 4
Biagiotti, Lisa – 12
Bian, He – 10
Black, Winston – 14
Boeckl , Christine – 17
Bothwell, Laura – 16
Boyle, Eric – 17
Braswell, Harold – 14
Brown, Michael – 7
Burek Pierce, Jennifer – 17
Campos, Elisa – 10
Caron, Simone – 6
Chettiar, Teri – 11
Chowkwanyun, Merlin – 16
Chung, Bowen – 17
Condrau, Flurin – 11
Conis, Elena – 7
Connor , Jennifer – 6
Connor , Jim – 6
Cooper, Glen – 10
Core, Rachel – 13
Cross, Gwenith – 6
Cummiskey, Julia – 17
Curley, James – 7
Dacome, Lucia – 13
Dashkoff, Peter – 7
Dawes, Laura – 17
Devine , Shauna - 6
DiMoia , John – 16
Doroshow, Deborah – 16
Downs, Jim – 14
Doyle, Dennis – 10
Duvall, Nicholas – 17
Eder, Sandra – 17
Eyler, John - 3
Fairman, Julie – 12
Fallon, Cara – 6
Foxhall, Katherine – 16
Freidenfelds, Lara - 4
Friedman, Judith – 6
Gardner, Martha – 11
Gelbart, Osnat – 6
Goldberg, Daniel – 16
Goldman, Abby – 7
Gosline, Sheldon – 11
Grachova, Sofiya – 6
Gradmann, Christoph – 11
Green, Laurie - 10
Greenberg, Stephen - 6
Greenlees, Janet – 10
Hammerschlag, Keren – 16
Hart, Evan - 4
Healey, Jenna – 11
Henckes, Nicolas – 13
Hildreth, Martha – 13
Hogan, Andrew – 6
Honigsbaum, Mark – 13
Hurrell, Casey – 10
Inrig, Stephen – 12
Jacobs- Browne, Loverne – 7
James, Douglas – 16
Jones, Felica – 17
Jones, Lori – 10
Jones, Ross – 14
Joseph, Terencia Kyneata – 7
Junod, Suzanne - 6
Kaplan, Rebecca – 4
Kazanjian, Powel – 13
Keirns, Carla – 7, 14
Keirns, Katherine – 7
Kennedy, Meegan – 10
Kim, Jane – 16
Kinukawa, Tomomi - 4
Kirk, Robert – 11
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Kline, Wendy – 6
Kushner, Howard – 11
Ladd-Taylor, Molly – 4
Lamb, Susan – 16
Largent, Mark – 14
Letocha, Phoebe Evans – 5
Li, Shang-Jen – 4
Liu, Yan – 14
Lombardo, Paul – 13
Marian, Meaghan – 10
Markowitz, Gerald – 16
Mawdsley, Stephen – 4
McCollin, Debbie – 7
Meckel, Richard – 7
Medeiros, Aimee – 17
Meldrum, Marcia – 17
Mold, Alex – 11, 12
Mooney, Graham – 13
More, Ellen – 11
Nesamony, Sam Raj – 6
O’Connor, Dan – 5
Palmer, Steven – 4
Parr, Jessica – 11
Patel, Sejal – 6
Pemberton, Neil – 11
Phillips, Sean – 7
Pruitt, Lisa – 4
Puglionesi, Alicia – 4
Ramsden, Edmund – 13
Reinarz, Jonathan – 14
Reumann, Miriam – 16
Reverby, Susan – 8
Risse, Guenter – 13
Roberts, Carolyn – 17
Rosner, David – 16
Ruis, Andrew – 7
Samson, Amy – 7
Savage, Sarah – 13
Schalick, Walton – 4
Schuster, David – 17
Shen, Wen – 16
Shotwell, Allen – 13
Shvarts, Shifra – 6, 14
Sivaramakrishnan, Kavita – 10
Snow, Stephanie – 12, 13
Stark, Laura – 11
Stegman, Stephanie – 10
Steller, Thomas – 7
Stolberg, Michael – 17
Summers, Martin – 10
Thomas, Karen Kruse – 16
Thompson, C. Michele – 7
Thompson, Catherine – 11
Tobbell, Dominique – 11
Tomes, Nancy – 12
Toon, Elizabeth – 11
van Reuler, Ellen – 14
Vandendriessche, Joris – 13
Varughese, Heather – 17
Wapner, Jessica – 12
Watkins, Emily – 16
Wegenstein, Bernadette – 5
Wilson, Emily – 6
Zimerman, Ariel – 14
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ALHHS ANNUAL MEETING PROGRAM
April 26 2012
Johns Hopkins School of Nursing, Baltimore MD
8:30 – 9:10 Registration/Breakfast
9:10-9:15 Greeting from the Chair. Introduction of Keynote Speaker
9:15-10:15 Keynote: Riccardo Ferrante, Director of Digital Services & IT Archivist at the Smithsonian Institution Archives Everything Moves Faster in the 21st Century: Digital Challenges and Opportunities
10:15-10:30 Break
10:30-11:30 Sarah Stauderman, Collections Care Manager at the Smithsonian Institution Archives.Approaches to Managing Analog Videotape Collections by Surveying Their Content, Formats, and Risk Factors”
11:30-12:30 Business Meeting
12:30-1:15 LUNCH
1:15-3:30 Mini Presentations
Micaela Sullivan-Fowler. From Scurvy to Horseshoe Crabs: The Making and Promotion of
Seaworthy: A History of Maritime Health & Medicine.
Susan Rishworth. Centennial Stories
Michael North and Stephen Novak. What’s New with the Medical Heritage Library.
Jeffrey Reznick. Newsfrom NLM’s History of Medicine Division.
2:15-2:30 Break
Nancy McCall. The Archives and History of Medicine Library at the Johns Hopkins Medical
Institutions.
Martha Stone. Was there an African-American Physician at the Massachusetts General
Hospital in 1850? The Case for – and Against – Peter W. Ray
Brooke Fox. Increasing Awareness to Maintain Relevancy: The Waring Historical Library’s
Online Exhibits
Rachel Ingold. Glass Eyeballs Need a Lot of Bubble Wrap: Moving the History of Medicine
Collections at Duke
3:30-:3:45 Final comments by President
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Sigerist Circle 2012 Program Schedule
Marriott Baltimore Inner Harbor at Camden Yards
University Rooms 3 & 4 Thursday, 26 April 2012
Scholarly Session
2:00 - 4:00 PM
Reception
4:00 - 5:15 PM
Business Meeting
5:15 - 6:30 PM
Scholarly Session:
LEFTIST SCHOLARSHIP AND ACTIVISM IN THE HISTORY OF MEDICINE
Moderator: Laura Bothwell, Graduate Student, Columbia University
Edna Bonhomme, Graduate Student, Princeton University, "Imperialism in
Egypt and Algeria: Political Resistance in Historical Scholarship from 1950
to Present"
Daniel Goldberg, Assistant Professor, East Carolina University, "Class,
Race, Gender, and Distinctions Between Health and Medicine: Tensions
& Opportunities in Leftist Historiography"
Heidi Knoblauch, Graduate Student, Yale University, "Beyond 'New' Social
History: Becoming an Active Historian"
Abigail Neely, Assistant Professor, University of Minnesota, "Scholarship
about Activism or Activist Scholarship?: Researching and Writing
History/ies of the Pholela Community Health Centre"
Comments & Discussion by the Audience
www.sigeristcircle.org
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AAHM
2013
ATLANTA, GEORGIA
Thursday, May 16
-
Sunday, May 19