Sunday Morning Medicine
Jacqueline AntonovichA weekly check-up of gender, medicine, and history in the news
- Jumping for justice.
- The death of Hannah Fizer.
- Eugenics as entertainment.
- Dental cartoons from 1945.
- Choosing love over eugenics.
- A brief history of dangerous others.
- A song that changed music forever.
- Taylor Swift as history of medicine books.
- Naming birds and the stain of colonialism.
- 20th-century slavery in a California sweatshop.
- The secret history of the oldest gay bar in NYC.
- Celebrating the “wild ladies” of Japanese folklore.
- A rare recipe from a talented chef enslaved by a Founding Father.
- Consequences COVID-19 on manuscript submissions by women.
- One legacy of the pandemic may be less judgment of the child-free.
Featured image caption: Leaflet for the “Vi-Tan” ultra-violet home unit from the Thermal Syndicate Ltd. (Courtesy Wellcome Collection)
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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