Sunday Morning Medicine

a cracked reddish tan plaster rendering of a face. The right eye seems to be filled with clay like a closed eyelid, the left is open, the mouth is just a few jagged holes, and there are two large holes in the left cheekbone

Plastered Skulls: What can a 10,000 year old tradition teach us about coping with death?

A British soldier holds three dogs which were trained to carry messages between the lines and command during World War I.

For the Sake of Humans: Animal Casualties and Medical Testing in Modern War

A handwritten diary is open to two pages.

“A keen vision and feeling of all ordinary life”: Pandemic Journaling in the History Classroom

A white platter with friend okra, fried chicken, mac and cheese, and collard greens

Alvenia Fulton, Soul Food, and Black Liberation: An Interview with Travis Weisse

Illustration of pharmacist administering medicine to dog at counter as owner weeps and bystanders watch with alarm,

Sunday Morning Medicine

Old Burying-Ground in Cambridge, Massachusetts. The image shows typical Puritan gravestone imagery, including a death's head, an hourglass, and text reading "MEMENTO MORI" ("remember you must die") and "FUGIT HORA" (time flies").

Straightened Up and Dying Right? Queering Puritan Deathbeds

A drawing of a woman in a white gown sitting in a large chair. She is surrounding by men in robes, all looking at her or bending over her.

Such a Pretty Tsaritsa