Schedule

Schedule for PhD training in Medical history

 

Date: 2nd and 3rd December 2013

Fredrik Holts hus, Room 251

Day 1  Room  How and why to practice medical history

 

O9.30-1200     Introduction: History as a science and history of medicine as a subject

                        Reading: Tosh

13.00-15.00    Why study medical history?
Reading: Duffin

15.00-16.00    What’s the modern history of medicine about?

                        Reading: Brandt/Gardener

 

 

Reading for day one:

     Tosh, John (2010 (1984)). The Pursuit of History. Aims, Methods and new Directions in the Study of Modern History. Harlow: Pearson, pp. 1-28.

Duffin. J. (2004). Lovers and Livers. Disease Concepts in History. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, pp. 1-36.

Brandt, A. M., & Gardner, M. (2000). The golden age of Medicine? In R. Cooter & J. Pickstone (Eds.), Companion to Medicine i the Twentieth Century (pp. 21-37). London and New York: Routledge.

 

 

 

Day 2 Some examples: Histories of sex, gender and the body

 

09.00-10.30    Knowledge and practice: anatomy and discipline

                        Reading: Lawrence and Foucault

10.30-12.00    Infection and surgery

                        Reading: Brandt, Schlich

13.00-14.30    Practical work: Identifying essential reading

14.45-16.00    Presentation of practical work, Evaluation of the PhD course

 

Reading for day 2:

Brandt A. No Magic Bullet, pp. 3-7; 161-83.

Lawrence S. His and Hers: Male and Female Anatomy in Anatomy Texts for U.S. Medical Students, 1890-1989. Social Science and Medicine 1992; 35: 925-934

Schlich T. The Technological Fix and the Modern Body: Surgery as a Paradigmatic Case. In: Crozier I (ed). 1920-present. The Age of Change (vol 6 of Kalof L, Bynum W. The Cultural History of the Human Body London: Berg Publishers, 2008

Foucault M. The Docile Body. In: Discipline and Punish. The Birth of the Prison. New York: Vintage Books, 1995; 135-169.

 

 

 

Published Nov. 19, 2013 10:47 AM - Last modified Nov. 19, 2013 10:50 AM