Podcast Episode 47 – Race, Reproduction, and American Medical Science
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Miriam Rich discusses her upcoming book, Monstrous Conceptions: Race, Reproduction, and Medical Science in America, 1830-1930.
Episode Image: Cover of A Descriptive Catalogue of the Monstrosities in the Cabinet of the Boston Society for Medical Improvement, published 1848. On the light brown background are the cursive red words “Jackson (J.B.S.),” a sticker with a library call number, and a blue stamp that reads “Surgeon Gen’l’s Office Library.” Image URL: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:A_descriptive_catalogue_of_the_monstrosities_in_the_cabinet_of_the_Boston_Society_for_Medical_Improvement_(IA_06730070R.nlm.nih.gov).pdf.Download mp3 file here.
Download pdf transcript here.
About Our Guest
Miriam Rich, PhD is a historian and the James Wade Rockwell Assistant Professor in Philosophy of Medicine at the University of Texas Medical Branch. Her scholarship explores the history of reproduction, concepts of disability and race, and health inequities in the United States. Rich’s first book, Monstrous Conceptions, is under contract with Columbia University Press. Her interdisciplinary writing appears in The Bulletin of the History of Medicine, The American Journal of Bioethics, Isis, The Lancet, Gender & History, New Genetics and Society, and Revista Ciência & Saúde Coletiva.