Author Archives: ngreen

June Opening Hours

The History of Medicine Library will be open Monday-Friday, 2-5pm, with the exception of the 7th, 14th, 27th, 28th, and 29th of June, when the library will be unstaffed.

To make an appointment please email historyofmedicine@bodleian.ox.ac.uk

 

May Opening Hours

The History of Medicine Library will be open Monday-Friday, 2-5pm, with the exception of the 1st, 4th, 8th, 17th, 18th, and 29th of May, when the library will be unstaffed.

To make an appointment please email historyofmedicine@bodleian.ox.ac.uk

April Opening Hours

The History of Medicine Library will be open Monday-Friday, 2-5pm, with the exception of Friday the 7th and Monday the 10th of April, when the library will be unstaffed.

To make an appointment please email historyofmedicine@bodleian.ox.ac.uk

 

March Opening Hours

The History of Medicine Library will be open Monday-Friday, 2-5pm, with the exception of the 13th-17th March inclusive, when the library will be unstaffed.

To make an appointment please email historyofmedicine@bodleian.ox.ac.uk

 

 

February Opening Hours

The History of Medicine Library will be open Monday-Friday, 2-5pm with the exception of Friday 3rd and Wednesday 22nd of February when the library will be unstaffed.

To make an appointment please email historyofmedicine@bodleian.ox.ac.uk

Black History Month 2022

Black History Month 2022 Logo

To mark Black History Month, we would like to highlight some recent publications available at the History of Medicine Library related to the experiences of Black communities. Published last year, Sean Morey Smith and Christopher D. E. Willoughby’s edited volume, Medicine and Healing in the Age of Slavery, was praised for ‘[decentralising] Western medicine in the lives of slaves’, engaging with case studies from across the Americas from the sixteenth to the nineteenth centuries and emphasising the survival of African medical practices. Also from 2021, Rebekah Lee’s Health, Healing and Illness in African History was recently described as ‘essential and rewarding reading’ for students. It provides a survey of existing scholarship while foregrounding less studied topics, such as mental health in colonial societies. Students wishing to know more about why ‘race’ became a central concept in medical practice within various imperial or transnational contexts can consult recent titles like Markku Hokkanen and Kalle Kananoja’s edited volume, Healers and Empires in Global History (2019), and Suman Seth’s Difference and Disease: Medicine, Race, and the Eighteenth-century British Empire (2018). Other recent publications available at HML have also focused on specific issues, attracting the attention of contemporary health practitioners, scholars, and media. Charles Jones’s The Organ Thieves (2020) analysed the traumatic history of how the heart of a deceased Black man was used in Virginia’s first heart transplant, without the donor’s or his family’s consent, illustrating the realities of 1960s segregation in the American South. Richard D. deShazo’s edited volume, The Racial Divide in American Medicine (2018), further explained past and present racial disparities in American healthcare, while also noting the contributions of Black Mississippi physicians to the Civil Rights Movement. All of these works take a multi-disciplinary approach to histories of medicine and race, which will be of interest to students.

 

Referenced book reviews:

Arriola, Kimberly Jacob, ‘The Organ Thieves: The Shocking Story of the First Heart Transplant in the Segregated South’, American Journal of Transplantation, 21/3 (2021), p. 1339.

Humphreys, Margaret, ‘Medicine and Healing in the Age of Slavery. Edited by Sean Morey Smith and Christopher D. E. Willoughby’, Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 53/2 (2022), pp. 340-341.

Messac, Luke, ‘Rebekah Lee. Health, Healing, and Illness in African History’, Isis, 113/1 (2022), pp. 116-117.

Ohles, J.A., ‘The Racial divide in American medicine: black physicians and the struggle for justice in health care’, Choice, 56/6 (2019), p. 769

October Opening Hours

The History of Medicine Library will be open Monday-Friday, 2-5pm, with the exception of the 5th-7th of October, when the library will be unstaffed.

To make an appointment, please email historyofmedicine@bodleian.ox.ac.uk