Sunday Morning Medicine
Jacqueline AntonovichA weekly check-up of gender, medicine, and history in the news
- How do pandemics end?
- When Japan reinvented filmmaking.
- How we lie to ourselves about history.
- A brief history of presidents and their taxes.
- How Early Modern empire changed medicine.
- The Black press and disinformation on Facebook.
- How the flu pandemic changed Halloween in 1918.
- Here’s how the 1918 flu affected that year’s election.
- New project aims to revive ozark cuisine through seeds.
- Your quarantine clutter has a long and distinguished history.
- What Colorado’s 1967 abortion law tells us about 2020 America.
- From Warhol to Steve McQueen: a history of video art in 30 works.
- The fight to save 100 years of Black history in gentrifying Los Angeles.
- How the “girl watching” fad of the 1960s taught men to harass women.
- California’s history on slavery is central to reparations push for Black people.
Featured image caption: Pneumonia strikes like a man eating shark led by its pilot fish the common cold Consult your physician / G.S., Jr. Hempstead New York, 1936. (Courtesy Library of Congress)
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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