LHUMK
(History
4393.01/7395.01):
Disease
and
Society from Antiquity to the Present
Mondays
6-8 (8:40 for UALR students)
Medical
Humanities
Conference Room
Freeway
Medical
Building, 5th floor
Laura
Ackerman Smoller,
Ph.D.
Office
hours: Wednesday, 2-4
Office: Stabler Hall (UALR) 604K
Phone: 569-8389
email: lasmoller@ualr.edu
http://www.ualr.edu/lasmoller
Week 1.
August 25.
Introduction: Ways of
thinking about disease and society.
Week 2.
September 1. Labor Day
holiday.
Week 3. September 8.
Disease as an agent of historical change.
Reading:
William McNeill, Plagues and Peoples
(New York, 1975), pp. 1-13, 132-165;
"AIDS
Transforms
Life, Family Structure in Lesotho," Weekend
Edition Sunday (NPR),
August 6,
2006;
"Access to HIV Drug Therapies
Remains
Limited," Weekend Edition Sunday
(NPR), August 13, 2006.
Lecture:
A history of histories of
disease.
Week 4.
September 15. The
"social construction" of disease.
Reading:
Elaine Showalter, Hystories:
Hysterical Epidemics and Modern Culture (New York, 1997), pp. 115-32;
Burkhard Bilger, ÒLetter
from Kentucky: Squirrel and Man,Ó The
New Yorker
(July 17, 2000): 58-67.
Week 5.
September 22. Different
cultures, different understandings of disease.
Reading:
Anne Fadiman, The
Spirit Catches You
and You Fall Down: A Hmong Child,
Her American Doctors, and the Collision of Two Cultures
(New
York: The Noonday Press, 1997),
pp. vii-ix, 1-11, 20-23, 38-49, 140-53, 171-80, 250-61 (optional: 278-88).
Lecture: Disease and medicine in the ancient world.
Week 6.
September 29. The Hippocratic
understanding of disease.
Reading:
Hippocrates, Epidemics, book 1:
1-3, in J. Chadwick and W. N. Mann, trans., Hippocratic
Writings, pp. 87-89;
The
Sacred
Disease, ibid., pp. 237-51;
Hippocratic Oath;
"Cures
of Apollo and Asclepius,Ó in Georg Luck, ed. and trans., Arcana
Mundi: Magic and the Occult in the Greek
and
Roman Worlds (Baltimore and
London: Johns Hopkins University Press,
1985),
pp. 142-45.
Lecture: The medieval view of disease.
Week 7.
October 6. Leprosy in
the medieval world.
Reading:
R. I. Moore, The
Formation of a
Persecuting Society (Oxford,
1987), pp.
45-65, 73-80;
Ritual
of Separation of a Leper, from the Old Sarum Rite;
Michael
Dols, ÒThe Leper in Medieval Islamic Society,Ó Speculum 58 (1983):
891-916 (selections).
Lecture: The experience of plague.
Week 8.
October 13. Plague in late
medieval and Renaissance Europe.
Lecture: The emergence of the "French pox."
Week 9. October
20. Syphilis in early modern
Europe.
Reading:
Anna Foa, "The New and the
Old: The Spread of Syphilis
(1494-1530)," trans. Carole C. Gallucci, in Edward Muir and Guido
Ruggiero, eds., Sex and Gender in Historical Perspective. Selections from Quaderni Storici (Baltimore, 1990), pp. 26-45;
optional
extra reading: Winfried Schleiner,
"Infection and Cure through Women:
Renaissance Constructions of Syphilis," Journal
of Medieval and Renaissance Studies
24 (1994):
499-517.
Lecture: Disease, medicine, and society in early modern Europe.
Week 11.
November 3.
Cholera.
Reading:
Richard
J. Evans, "Epidemics and Revolutions: Cholera
in Nineteenth-Century
Europe," in Terrence Ranger and Paul Slack, eds., Epidemics and
Ideas, as above, pp. 149-73
(optional: Edgar Allen Poe, "The
Mask of the Red
Death")
Lecture: The progressive era and the science of eugenics
Week 12. November 10. "Degeneracy," "defectives," euthanasia, and eugenics.Week 13.
November 17. Hysteria and its treatments.
Lecture: The emergence of AIDS.
Week 14. November 24. Venereal diseases in modern America.
Lecture: The coming plague?
Week 15. December 1. Emerging threats.
Reading:
Laurie Garrett, "The Next
Pandemic?" Foreign
Affairs 84 (July/August 2005): 3ff (printout from
Academic
Search
Premier);
"International
groups fly to Angola to try and stop the spread of Marburg fever," Morning
Edition (transcript), April 13,
2005;
Sharon
LaFraniere and Deniise Grady, "Stalking a Deadly Virus, Battling a
TownÕs
Fears," New York Times, April
17, 2005;
"Health
professionals in Kano, Nigeria, still have reservations about the
Western-led
polio immunization campaign," Morning
Edition (transcript), April 13,
2005.
Week 16. December 8.
Disease in the media.
Course requirements for UAMS seniors:
Additional
requirements for UALR students (3
credit
hours):
Grading:
Grades are computed on the following scale:
A=90-100%
B=80-89%
C=70-79%
D=60-69%
F=0-59%
In case of some mix-up, it is a good idea to save all returned work until you receive your grade at the end of the semester.
Students with
disabilities:
It is the policy and practice of
the University of Arkansas at
Little Rock to create inclusive
learning environments. If there are aspects
of the instruction or design of this course that result in barriers to
your
inclusion or to accurate assessment of achievement--such as
time-limited exams,
inaccessible web content, or the use of non-captioned videos--please
notify the
instructor as soon as possible. Students are also welcome to
contact the
Disability Resource Center, telephone 501-569-3143 (v/tty). For more
information, visit the DRC website at www.ualr.edu/disability.
History Department assessment policy: The policy of the History Department is
to engage
students in the process of assessing courses in the department's
curriculum. Department faculty and the UALR administration use
assessment
data to monitor how well students are learning both historical content
and the
skills of essay writing. At several points during the semester
you may be
asked to participate in this process by writing a brief essay in class
or your
instructor might submit one or more of your examinations for review by
other
members of the department. All assessment activities are
conducted on an
anonymous basis and any evaluations will be kept in strict confidence.
When you are asked to participate in this process please do your
best.
Direct any questions regarding assessment to your instructor or
the
department chairperson.
Classroom etiquette: Please turn off cell phones and beepers before entering the classroom or set them to a silent alert. In the rare event you must enter late or leave class early, please let me know in advance.
Cheating and plagiarism: Cheating and plagiarism are serious offenses and will be treated as such. ("Plagiarism" means "to adopt and reproduce as one's own, to appropriate to one's use, and incorporate in one's own work without acknowledgment the ideas of others or passages from their writings and works." See Section VI, Code of Student Rights, Responsibilities and Behavior, Student Handbook, p. 39. Copying directly from the textbook or an encyclopedia article without quotation marks or an identifying citation, for example, constitutes plagiarism.) Anyone who engages in such activities will receive no credit for that assignment and may in addition be turned over to the Academic Integrity and Grievance Committee for University disciplinary action, which may include separation from the University.
Copyright notice: Copyright © by Laura Smoller as to this syllabus and all lectures. Students and auditors are prohibited from selling notes during this course to (or being paid for taking notes by) any person or commercial firm without the express written permission of the professor teaching this course.