History of medicine and health care 2013 Honors College; History 1090; Sociology 1488; shrs 2906 coordinators: Jonathon Erlen, Ph. D. 648-8927-office


Morelli, Giovanna; et. al. “Yersinia pestis genome sequencing identifies patterns of global phylogenetic diversity.” Nature Genetics 2010 (42): 1140-1143



Download 0.81 Mb.
Page7/27
Date14.08.2017
Size0.81 Mb.
#31943
1   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9   10   ...   27

Morelli, Giovanna; et. al. “Yersinia pestis genome sequencing identifies patterns of global phylogenetic diversity.” Nature Genetics 2010 (42): 1140-1143.

Haensch,S., Bianucci,R., Signoli,M., Rajerison,M., Schultz,M., Kacki,S., Vermunt,M., Weston,D.A., Hurst,D., Achtman,M., Carniel,E., Bramanti,B. 2010. Distinct clones of Yersinia pestis caused the Black Death. PLoS Pathog. 6, e1001134.

Bos, Gerritt. “The Black Death in Hebrew literature: HA-MA��AMAR BE-QADDA��AT HA-DEVER

(Treatise on Pestilential Fever).”

Kennedy, Maev. “Black Death study lets rats off the hook.” Guardian, August 18, 2011.

Bos, Kristen I., et.al. “A draft genome of Yersinia pestis from victims of the Black Death.” Nature, 2011, October 12.


http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/vaop/ncurrent/full/nature10549.html
McGrath, Matt. “Black Death genetic code ’built’.” BBC News. October 12, 2011.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-15278366
Fabbri, Christiane N. “Treating Medieval plague: The wonderful virtues of theriac.” Early Science and Medicine, 2007, 12: 247-283.
Carmichael, Ann. “Plague and more plagues.” Early Science and Medicine, 2003, 8(3): 253-266.
Cohn, Samuel K. “Households and plague in early modern Italy.” Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 2007, 38(2): 177-205.
George D. Sussman. "Was the Black Death in India and China?, Bulletin of the History of Medicine, 2011, 85(3), pp. 319-355.

Eamon, William. “Cannibalism and contagion: Framing syphilis in counter-Reformation Italy.” Early Science and Medicine, 1998, 3(1): 1-31.




Crawshaw, Jane S. “The Beasts of burial: Pizzigamorti and public health for the plague in early modern Venice.” Social History of Medicine. 2011, 24(3): 570-587.

Mengel, David. “A plague on Bohemia? Mapping the Black Death.” Past and Present, 2011, 211(1): 3-34.


Cerny, K. “Early modern “Citation Index”? Medical authorities in academic treatises on plague (1480-1725).” Prague Medical Report, 2012, 113(2): 119-135.
Easterday, W. Ryan. “An additional step in the transmission of Yersinia pestis?” The ISME Journal, 2012, 6: 231-236.
Riehm, Julia M.; et. al. “Yersinia pestis lineages in Mongolia.” PLoS One. February 17, 2012; 7(2): e30624.
DeWitte, Sharon; and Slavin, Philip. “Between famine and death: England on the eve of the Black Death—Evidence from paleoepidemiology and manorial accounts.” Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 2013, 44(1): 37-60.
Harbeck, Michaela; et. al. ““Yersinia pestis DNA from skeletal remains from the insights into Justinianic Plague.” 2013, PLoS Pathog 9(5): e1003349.
September 17 Tuesday 6:00 p.m., Lecture Room #5, Scaife Hall
Richard Kahn, M.D.

Adjunct Assistant Professor of Medicine, Dartmouth Medical School

Private Practitioner, Rockport, Maine
A Journal with Anatomist Antonio Valsalva, from 18th Century Bologna to 21st Century Rockport, Maine, with Some Surprising Side Trips.”


September 18 Wednesday

Andreas Vesalius and the Advent of Evidence Based Anatomy

by Carey Balaban, Ph.D., University of Pittsburgh, Otolaryngology and Neurobiology
Medicine and Western Civilization. “Vesalius.” p.54.

_____________________________________________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________________________________
Kusukawa, Sachiko. “The medical renaissance of the sixteenth century: Vesalius, medical humanism and bloodletting.” In The Healing Arts: Health, Disease and Society in Europe 1500-1800, pp. 58-83.
Keele, Kenneth D. "Leonardo da Vinci's influence on Renaissance anatomy." Medical History 1964 (8): 360-370.
Martinez-Vidal, Alvar; and Pardo-Tomas, Jose. “Anatomical theatres and the teaching of anatomy in early modern Spain.” Medical History 2005 (49): 251-280.

Edelstein, Ludwig. "Andreas Vesalius, the humanistic." Bulletin of the History of Medicine 1943 (14): 547-561.


Kornell, Monique. “Illustrations from the Wellcome Library Vesalius's method of articulating the skeleton and a drawing in the collection of the Wellcome Library.” Medical History 2000 (44): 97-110.
Kemp, Martin. "The mark of truth: Looking and learning in some anatomical illustrations from the Renaissance." in Medicine and the Five Senses. pp. 85-121.
Thomas, Duncan P. “Thomas Vicary and the Anatomie of Mans Body.” Medical History 2006 (50): 235-246.
Garrison,D. H.; and Hast, M. H. “Andreas Vesalius on the larynx and hyoid bone: an annotated translation from the 1543 and 1555 editions of De humani corporis fabrica.” Medical History 1993 (37): 3-36.

Richardson, W. F.; and Carman, J. B. “On translating Vesalius.” Medical History 1994 (38): 281-302.

Kornell, Monique. “Vesalius's method of articulating the skeleton and a drawing in the collection of the Wellcome Library.” Medical History 2000 (44): 97-110.
Pranghofer, Sebastian. ““It could be Seen more Clearly in Unreasonable Animals than in Humans”: The Representation of the Rete Mirabile in Early Modern Anatomy.” Medical History 2009 (53): 561-586.
Forshaw, Peter J. “Paradoxes, absurdities, and madness”: Conflict over alchemy, magic and medicine in the works of Andreas Libavius and Heinrich Khunrath.” Early Science and Medicine, 2008, 13: 53-81.
Montford, Angela. “‘Brothers who have studied medicine’: Dominican Friars in thirteenth-century Paris.” Social History of Medicine. 2011, 24(3): 535-553.



Download 0.81 Mb.

Share with your friends:
1   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9   10   ...   27




The database is protected by copyright ©ininet.org 2024
send message

    Main page