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Posts by ANZSHM

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This is an ANZSHM exclusive - interested in coming along? visit lnkd.in/gPFv8E-B and sign up today

1 week ago 0 0 0 0
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Join us with former ANZSHM Vice President Peter Burke to discuss his recent book "From Harrods to Hackney: a surgical miscellany", exploring his journey in the medical & surgical fields, biographies of key figures & intersections between medicine & history.

Online, Wednesday 22 April, 6pm (AEST).

1 week ago 2 0 1 0

Reminder: ANZSHM's health & history online workshop is on today at 3pm AEDT - theres still time to sign up if you haven't yet!

1 month ago 1 0 0 0

If you would be interested in being involved please reach out to Samantha (sgrey1@usc.edu.au) with your expression of interest, any questions, or suggest an article you’ve been meaning to get to!

1 month ago 0 0 0 0
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Ever feel there are too many interesting medical history articles but not enough time?

Samantha Grey, ANZSHM's HDR/ECR representative is proposing a journal article reading group, where once a month the group tackles an article of interest and then meet up and discuss the paper!

1 month ago 2 1 1 0

We will discuss:
- What is the point of peer reviewing?
- How does a reviewer approach this task?
- What are the possible outcomes of review?
- And, how do you approach addressing feedback and making changes?

2 months ago 1 1 0 0

This workshop will introduce you to some of the friendly faces currently behind the Health and History Journal, the editor Effie Karageorgos and editorial officer Gemma Lucy Smart and help de-mystify the peer review process.

2 months ago 2 1 0 0
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Online Workshop - ANZSHM x Health & History

What is the peer review process and how do you deal with reviewer feedback?

February 26th 2025 @ 3pm AEDT (2pm AEST)

Zoom details:
lnkd.in/g77JzGdg...
Password: 534412

Health and History Journal: lnkd.in/gH8u3QJ6

2 months ago 6 5 2 1

What is the peer review process and how do you deal with reviewer feedback?
We will discuss:
- What is the point of peer reviewing?
- How does a reviewer approach this task?
- What are the possible outcomes of review?
- And, how do you approach addressing feedback and making changes?

2 months ago 0 0 0 0
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This workshop will introduce you to some of the friendly faces currently behind the Health and History Journal, the editor Effie Karageorgos and editorial officer Gemma Lucy Smart and help de-mystify the peer review process.

2 months ago 0 0 0 0
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Part 2:

2 months ago 1 0 0 0
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Couldn't make it to this year's ANZSHM conference? Take a look at some of the highlights from "Health History in the Making", attendee reflections, grant recipients & the winner of the biennial book prize!

2 months ago 2 0 1 0
This image is a poster for the event, describing the same details as the post

This image is a poster for the event, describing the same details as the post

Our final online seminar for 2025 ⬇️

Next week, we have the wonderful Prof Alison Downham Moore and PhD candidate Michaela Malmberg presenting on "Women in Gynaecology" 🩺

When: Wednesday 17 December 7pm AEDT
Where: email anzshm@anzshm.org.au for Zoom link
#histmed #history #histSTM

4 months ago 4 1 0 0
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Pregnant Women’s Sexuality in Early Modern England This book provides the first history of pregnant women’s sexuality in England from the seventeenth to eighteenth centuries.

It is exciting to announce that my first book has just been published with Palgrave!

Pregnant Women’s Sexuality explores ideas and practices about pregnant women’s sex in early modern England and European medicine ✨

link.springer.com/book/10.1007...
#history #histofsex

4 months ago 35 5 3 0
Preview
A Social History of Polio Vaccination in Australia, 1950s to 1970s

🌟 PhD Opportunity in History of Health 🌟

Social History of Polio Vaccination in Australia, 1950 to 1970
with Prof Catharine Coleborne
Newcastle (or Sydney-based)
Domestic students only

Applications close 30 January 2026 ❗

More information ⬇️
www.newcastle.edu.au/study/resear...

#histSTM #histmed

4 months ago 11 5 0 0
This image is a poster for the event, describing the same details as the post

This image is a poster for the event, describing the same details as the post

Our final online seminar for 2025 ⬇️

Next week, we have the wonderful Prof Alison Downham Moore and PhD candidate Michaela Malmberg presenting on "Women in Gynaecology" 🩺

When: Wednesday 17 December 7pm AEDT
Where: email anzshm@anzshm.org.au for Zoom link
#histmed #history #histSTM

4 months ago 4 1 0 0
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My latest article for Health and History @anzshm.bsky.social explores how emotion helped establish new hygienic norms in turn-of-the-century Sydney, revealing how disgust and pride motivated both compliance with and resistance to public health policies on plague and TB:
dx.doi.org/10.1353/hah....

6 months ago 20 12 0 1
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That's a wrap on a week of wonderful medical history, at the ANZSHM 2025 Conference! Here's an image from fabulous keynote speaker Prof Jakelin Troy, telling us about the importance of flies in Indigenous global public health thinking! 🪰

9 months ago 3 1 0 0
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Historians of medicine in Sydney for ANZ Society for the History of Medicine conference gather with sleepy koala at Featherdale wildlife sanctuary: Kelly Burke, me, Michele Thompson, @hanspols.bsky.social, Marta Hanson
@anzshm.bsky.social @sshmedicine.bsky.social @aahmhistmed.bsky.social #histmed

9 months ago 27 2 1 0
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Home | ANZSHM

Registrations are open for the Australian and New Zealand Society of the History of Medicine 19th Biennial Conference in Sydney this July. Details with provisional program available here. www.anzshm2025.com @anzshm.bsky.social

11 months ago 3 1 0 0

Tomorrow! Our first seminar for the year, with Paula Michaels 🎉

1 year ago 1 1 0 0
The image is a poster outlining details of the WOSANZ talk. It features a photograph of the biography of William Osler by Harvey Cushing, and a quote from the Medical Library Association April 1925 about Osler's life. The poster states: "Join us in commemorating the 100th anniversary of the publication of Harvey Cushing's Pulitzer-prize winning Life of Sir William Osler... The international meeting will convene online on Wednesday 16 April 2025 at 9pm Melbourne Time."

The image is a poster outlining details of the WOSANZ talk. It features a photograph of the biography of William Osler by Harvey Cushing, and a quote from the Medical Library Association April 1925 about Osler's life. The poster states: "Join us in commemorating the 100th anniversary of the publication of Harvey Cushing's Pulitzer-prize winning Life of Sir William Osler... The international meeting will convene online on Wednesday 16 April 2025 at 9pm Melbourne Time."

Our colleagues of the William Osler Society of Australia & New Zealand are hosting a seminar "Harvey Cushing's Life of Sir William Osler: 1925-2025" on 16 April at 9pm AEST.

Please email nadeemtdyn @outlook .com for the Zoom meeting link.

1 year ago 1 0 0 0

@philippabarr.bsky.social @anzshm.bsky.social

1 year ago 4 2 2 0

Reminder - our first online seminar for the year will take place in two weeks! Please join us for this very exciting seminar by Assoc. Prof Paula Michaels.

1 year ago 3 1 0 1
History of Medicine in Southeast Asia (HOMSEA) Conference

The (excellent) program and registration for History of Medicine in Southeast Asia (HoMSEA) in Yogyakarta 24-27 June 2025 - now available on the website
#histmed #histstm @sshmedicine.bsky.social @aahmhistmed.bsky.social @anzshm.bsky.social

1 year ago 8 7 1 0
Call for Papers | ANZSHM

❗The CFP for the ANZSHM 2025 Conference has been extended ❗

Please submit abstracts by Friday 21st March via the conference website:

www.anzshm2025.com/call-for-pap...

1 year ago 4 5 0 0
The Politics of Blood Donation and Transfusion: Histories, Controversies, and Futures 6 June 2025, Thackray Museum of Medicine (Leeds, UK) Keynote Speaker: Dr Jenny Bangham (University of Edinburgh) From early transfusion experiments and wartime blood banking to contemporary controversies over donor eligibility and the global plasma economy, blood has been a site of both solidarity and division. At the same time, new developments in synthetic blood, xenotransfusion, and bioengineered alternatives challenge existing frameworks of donation and transfusion, raising questions about the future of blood governance, ethics, and access. This symposium seeks to examine the historical, social, and political dimensions of blood donation and transfusion, focusing on how they have been governed, contested, and reimagined across time and space. We invite contributions from scholars in anthropology, history, sociology, medical humanities, Science and Technology Studies, bioethics, and related fields. This symposium is held in conjunction with the special exhibition Blood: Ties and Tensions at the Thackray Museum of Medicine and will feature a keynote lecture by Dr. Jenny Bangham, author of Blood Relations: Transfusion and the Making of Human Genetics (2020, University of Chicago Press). Panellists will also have the opportunity to explore the exhibition, fostering further discussions around its curated themes. A limited number of bursaries will be available to support domestic travel for postgraduate, early career researchers, and independent scholars.

The Politics of Blood Donation and Transfusion: Histories, Controversies, and Futures 6 June 2025, Thackray Museum of Medicine (Leeds, UK) Keynote Speaker: Dr Jenny Bangham (University of Edinburgh) From early transfusion experiments and wartime blood banking to contemporary controversies over donor eligibility and the global plasma economy, blood has been a site of both solidarity and division. At the same time, new developments in synthetic blood, xenotransfusion, and bioengineered alternatives challenge existing frameworks of donation and transfusion, raising questions about the future of blood governance, ethics, and access. This symposium seeks to examine the historical, social, and political dimensions of blood donation and transfusion, focusing on how they have been governed, contested, and reimagined across time and space. We invite contributions from scholars in anthropology, history, sociology, medical humanities, Science and Technology Studies, bioethics, and related fields. This symposium is held in conjunction with the special exhibition Blood: Ties and Tensions at the Thackray Museum of Medicine and will feature a keynote lecture by Dr. Jenny Bangham, author of Blood Relations: Transfusion and the Making of Human Genetics (2020, University of Chicago Press). Panellists will also have the opportunity to explore the exhibition, fostering further discussions around its curated themes. A limited number of bursaries will be available to support domestic travel for postgraduate, early career researchers, and independent scholars.

Some key questions we seek to explore: • How have the politics of blood donation and transfusion changed over time, and how do these shifts reflect broader transformations in biomedicine, nationalism, and social imaginaries? • How has the history of blood banking shaped knowledge and discourses on race and ethnicity, class and caste, gender, sex, sexuality, and citizenship? • How do infrastructures of blood banking and the commercialization of blood products reproduce or mitigate global health inequalities? • What ethical and political challenges emerge with new blood technologies, such as synthetic blood, xenotransfusion, and stem cell-based alternatives? • How do patients, donors, and medical professionals experience and navigate the evolving landscape of blood donation and transfusion? • How do artistic, literary, and activist engagements with blood expose or reimagine the politics of donation and transfusion? Potential topics include, but are not limited to: • Historical and contemporary shifts in donor eligibility and exclusion • National blood donation policies and their political and ethical stakes • Racialised and gendered discourses surrounding blood donation and transfusion • Ethics and governance of blood banking, plasma economies, and commercialised donation • Technological futures: synthetic blood, xenotransfusion, and regenerative medicine • Stigma and discrimination in blood donation and patients receiving transfusion • Political, aesthetic, and activist engagements with blood donation and transfusion in media, art, and literature To apply: Please submit a 200–300 word abstract and a brief bio (100-150 word) via the Submission Point by 25 April. We hope the symposium will lead to contributions to a special issue or edited volume. For any inquiries, please contact Dr Jieun Kim (j.e.kim@leeds.ac.uk) or Dr Claire Turner (c.o.turner@leeds.ac.uk).

Some key questions we seek to explore: • How have the politics of blood donation and transfusion changed over time, and how do these shifts reflect broader transformations in biomedicine, nationalism, and social imaginaries? • How has the history of blood banking shaped knowledge and discourses on race and ethnicity, class and caste, gender, sex, sexuality, and citizenship? • How do infrastructures of blood banking and the commercialization of blood products reproduce or mitigate global health inequalities? • What ethical and political challenges emerge with new blood technologies, such as synthetic blood, xenotransfusion, and stem cell-based alternatives? • How do patients, donors, and medical professionals experience and navigate the evolving landscape of blood donation and transfusion? • How do artistic, literary, and activist engagements with blood expose or reimagine the politics of donation and transfusion? Potential topics include, but are not limited to: • Historical and contemporary shifts in donor eligibility and exclusion • National blood donation policies and their political and ethical stakes • Racialised and gendered discourses surrounding blood donation and transfusion • Ethics and governance of blood banking, plasma economies, and commercialised donation • Technological futures: synthetic blood, xenotransfusion, and regenerative medicine • Stigma and discrimination in blood donation and patients receiving transfusion • Political, aesthetic, and activist engagements with blood donation and transfusion in media, art, and literature To apply: Please submit a 200–300 word abstract and a brief bio (100-150 word) via the Submission Point by 25 April. We hope the symposium will lead to contributions to a special issue or edited volume. For any inquiries, please contact Dr Jieun Kim (j.e.kim@leeds.ac.uk) or Dr Claire Turner (c.o.turner@leeds.ac.uk).

CFP: The Politics of Blood Donation and Transfusion: Histories, Controversies, and Futures.

I'm delighted to share the call for papers for the @hematopolitics.bsky.social symposium this June at the wonderful @thackraymuseum.bsky.social in Leeds!

Please share widely!

1 year ago 8 6 1 0
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Project MUSE - Health and History-Volume 26, Number 2, 2024

We are delighted to share that the latest issue of our journal, Health & History, is now online and in print:

Special issue - "Reproductive Health and Women's Rights in Contemporary History"

Congratulations to special editors Gayle and Linda and all the contributors 🎉

muse.jhu.edu/issue/54314

1 year ago 5 2 0 0
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Announcing the Roper-Hannah Chair in the History of Healthcare and Health Equity King's & Dalhousie announce the creation of the Roper-Hannah Chair in the History of Healthcare and Health Equity to explore medical humanities.

This looks promising! Wonderful to see reference to 'the indispensable tools of critical historical analysis'! And to 'health equity' and the deficiencies of Eurocentrism. Such a contrast to south of the border!

#histmed #histstm #STS @aahmhistmed.bsky.social @sshmedicine.bsky.social

1 year ago 20 10 3 0
The image is a poster advertising a talk for Paula Michaels' seminar on the history of "miracle cures, medical internationalism and US-Soviet relations, 1943-48". The poster states the talk occurs on 16 April at 7pm AEST and the zoom link is accessible via anzshm@anzshm.org.au

The image is a poster advertising a talk for Paula Michaels' seminar on the history of "miracle cures, medical internationalism and US-Soviet relations, 1943-48". The poster states the talk occurs on 16 April at 7pm AEST and the zoom link is accessible via anzshm@anzshm.org.au

❗ANZSHM Online Seminar 2025 ❗

The first seminar for the year will take place on April 16, 7pm AEST

The wonderful Paula Michaels will discuss miracle cures and US-Soviet relations 🌟

For the zoom link, please email anzshm@anzshm.org.au

1 year ago 5 2 0 1