Sunday Morning Medicine
Sunday Morning Medicine
A weekly check-up of gender, medicine, and history in the news
- The myth of the flapper?
- Dangerous Victorian fashions.
- Deadly dollhouse dioramas.
- Everyday life in a secret city.
- How I was saved from the Titanic.
- A naughty Victorian pop-up book.
- The man who was immune to AIDS.
- Remembering a civil rights swim-in.
- A very old and very filthy Latin poem.
- Medical experiments on Irish children.
- The strange history of the dude ranch.
- How historians are using nuclear fallout.
- The first medical publication in America.
- Reimagining Iowa’s Underground Railroad.
- A San Francisco neighborhood – then and now.
- The story behind this historic mom-to-be photo.
- Lewis & Clark only became popular 50 years ago.
- Docs don’t know what women want to know about birth control.
- The 19th century map that could have transformed the American West.
Jacqueline Antonovich is the creator and co-founder of Nursing Clio and served as executive editor from 2012 to 2021. She is an Assistant Professor of History at Muhlenberg College. Her current research focuses on women physicians, race, gender, and medical imperialism in the American West. Jacqueline received her PhD from the University of Michigan in 2018.
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