Articles
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What to Expect When You’re Expiring: Pregnancy and Death in Seventeenth-Century England
On October 12, 1622, a 26-year-old English woman named Elizabeth Jocelin gave birth to her…
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Why We Need to Talk About Death Right Now
I can hear some of you say, “Can’t we talk about something more pleasant?” That’s…
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The Deathbed: A New Nursing Clio Series
This past fall, when we began work on a Nursing Clio series about death, we…
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Pandemic Academic: Mothering from the Home Office
Twelve years ago, Baby #2 fell asleep in her carseat on the way to the…
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The Cruise Ship as Disease Heterotopia
We know the images: cruise ships with sick passengers searching for a place to dock…
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Sunday Morning Medicine
A weekly check-up of gender, medicine, and history in the news Art Activist Barbie. The…
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Living in Isolation and Connecting through Reading, 1930–1946
Amid all the dramatic headlines about COVID-19, news stories describe how people now share anniversaries,…
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Writing Histories of Intimate Care and Social Distancing in the Age of COVID-19
In hindsight, it was probably a touch of grad school-induced hubris that led me to…
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Ordinary Death in a Pandemic
On Tuesday, March 17, 2020, shortly after noon, my mother, Carol Lenoir Price Swedberg, died…
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Sunday Morning Medicine
A weekly check-up of gender, medicine, and history in the news We are at war.…