Explores the entangled histories of race, medicine, science, and health in American history from the colonial era to the present. The course foregrounds the African American experience in the production of medical knowledge and power. Students explore histories of scientific racism, chattel slavery, medical experimentation, Jim Crow hospitals, environmental racism, and racialized medicine alongside the more familiar story of the development of professional medicine, science, healthcare, and public health.

Prerequisites: HIST 106R or upper division standing.

4

Units

Optional

Grading

1, 2, 3

Passtime

None

Level Limit

Letters and science

College
MOORE T
No info found

Lecture

GIRV 1112
T R
11:00 AM - 12:15 PM
42 / 42 Full
HIST 87
162 / 162 Full
Japanese History Through Art and Literature
Kate McDonald 4.4
T R
09:30 AM - 10:45 AM
52.4% A
HIST 99
0 / 15 Enrolled
Introduction to Research
T B A
84.6% A
HIST 101QA
42 / 42 Full
Queer North America
Jarett Henderson 3.4
M W
11:00 AM - 12:15 PM
66.7% A
HIST 105R
17 / 15 Full
Undergraduate Research Seminar in History in Atomic Age Problems
Patrick McCray 4.6
T
09:00 AM - 11:50 AM
100.0% A
HIST 121R
15 / 15 Full
Undergraduate Research Seminar in Early Modern Europe, 1450-1700
Hilary Bernstein 4.0
W
14:00 PM - 16:50 PM
57.7% A
HIST 133D
117 / 150 Enrolled
The Nazi Holocaust and Other Genocides
Harold Marcuse 3.0
T R
14:00 PM - 15:15 PM
43.3% A