Sunday Morning Medicine
Sunday Morning Medicine
A weekly check-up of gender, medicine, and history in the news
- I was Jane Doe once.
- Was Freud right about hysteria?
- Twitter is full of fake history photos.
- Medical uses of ice in the Civil War.
- Gender and labor in jellyfish husbandry.
- The life and death of a radical sisterhood.
- The feminist history of brown paper bags.
- The woman who tried to take down Darwin.
- The history of America in hole-punched photos.
- My vagina is terrific, your opinion about it is not.
- Researching the families of a single slave auction.
- Interracial intimacy and film as social commentary.
- Gas! Anesthesia history in Early American newspapers.
- Medieval censorship, nudity, and the history of the fig leaf.
- The extremely bloody and unimaginably gross history of surgery.
- Study suggests women less likely to receive CPR from bystanders.
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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