43 results match your criteria: "School of Historical Studies[Affiliation]"

Focusing on three specific organizations-The Terrence Higgins Trust (THT), Blackliners, and The NAZ Project (Naz)-this article explores the different ways in which voluntary organizations responded to Black gay men (BGM) in Britain during the AIDS crisis from the 1980s to 2000. Illustrating how the place of BGM in Britain at this time was multidimensional and often contradictory, the first section demonstrates how they required safer-sex messaging that took account of the heterogeneous ways in which they experienced the intersection of racism and homophobia. Situated in this context, the second section explores for the first time the well-documented work of THT as it applied to BGM.

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Background: For more than a century, scientists have tried to find the key to causation of mental ill health in heredity and genetics. The difficulty of finding clear and actionable answers in our genes has not stopped them looking. This history offers important context to understanding mental health science today.

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Article Synopsis
  • Elites were very important in shaping Europe after the Roman Empire fell, influencing both big and small communities during the Early Middle Ages.
  • Researchers studied a community in Italy from the 6th to 8th centuries and found that it was made up of related elite families that grew into one big family over time.
  • This community was diverse, welcoming different people as it developed, showing that powerful leaders could bring together various backgrounds instead of just sticking to their own.
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What can art history offer medical humanities?

Med Humanit

September 2024

Institute for Medical Humanities, Durham University, Durham, UK.

This article charts the emergence of visual medical humanities as a space of academic research, creative practice and lively critical debate, with a focus on how art historical scholarship has influenced the field's formation. Concentrating on developments over the past decade, it offers an overview of current scholarship while highlighting opportunities and challenges for the future. We begin with a survey of medical and health humanities handbooks and readers, noting that their engagement with art and visual culture is predominately limited to the contexts of therapy, clinical pedagogy and medical history.

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Psychiatrist, psychoanalyst, and neurologist William Guglielmo Niederland (1904-1993) received widespread acclaim for his research on Holocaust survivors, yet his other psychoanalytic work has yet to achieve comparable recognition. In this article, I will examine the affinities between Niederland's study of the Holocaust survivors and other major works in his canon to demonstrate the cohesive nature of his worldview, philosophy, and psychoanalytic trajectory while also illuminating Niederland's portrait of the human being. This work is divided into two sections.

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Fine-scale sampling uncovers the complexity of migrations in 5th-6th century Pannonia.

Curr Biol

September 2023

Department of Ecology and Evolution, Stony Brook University, 650 Life Sciences Building, Stony Brook, NY 11794, USA. Electronic address:

Article Synopsis
  • The Western Roman Empire started to fall apart in the 4th and 5th centuries, and different groups, called "barbarians," began to settle in the areas it left behind.
  • Researchers studied 38 burial sites from the 5th century in Lake Balaton, Hungary, to understand how communities formed after this collapse.
  • They found a lot of genetic variety among the people in these burial sites, with some showing influences from northern Europe, and discovered that burial customs were similar but the people's ancestry was quite different.
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A scientist's choice of research topic affects the impact of their work and future career. While the disparity between nations in scientific information, funding, and facilities has decreased, scientists on the cutting edge of their fields are not evenly distributed across nations. Here, we quantify relative progress in research topics of a nation from the time-series comparison of reference lists from papers, using 71 million published papers from Scopus.

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Global Health Needs Modernized Containment Strategies to Prepare for the Next Pandemic.

Front Public Health

July 2022

Faculty Development and Diversity, Global Health and Infectious Diseases, Department of Pediatrics, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, United States.

COVID-19 continues to be a public health crisis, while severely impacting global financial markets causing significant economic and social hardship. As with any emerging disease, pharmaceutical interventions required time, emphasizing the initial and continuing need for non-pharmaceutical interventions. We highlight the role of anthropological and historical perspectives to inform approaches to non-pharmaceutical interventions for future preparedness.

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A genetic perspective on Longobard-Era migrations.

Eur J Hum Genet

April 2019

Dipartimento di Scienze della Vita e Biotecnologie, Università di Ferrara, 44121, Ferrara, Italy.

Article Synopsis
  • From the first century AD, Europe experienced significant population movements known as Barbarian migrations, with the Longobard culture influencing a large area just not well understood.
  • This study reports the analysis of 87 complete mitochondrial DNA sequences from cemeteries in the Czech Republic, Hungary, and Italy linked to the Longobard migration.
  • Findings suggest genetic similarities between Longobard individuals in different regions, indicating complex interactions and admixture between Longobard and neighboring communities during the early medieval period.
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A correction to this article has been published and is linked from the HTML and PDF versions of this paper. The error has not been fixed in the paper.

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History and archaeology have a well-established engagement with issues of premodern societal development and the interaction between physical and cultural environments; together, they offer a holistic view that can generate insights into the nature of cultural resilience and adaptation, as well as responses to catastrophe. Grasping the challenges that climate change presents and evolving appropriate policies that promote and support mitigation and adaptation requires not only an understanding of the science and the contemporary politics, but also an understanding of the history of the societies affected and in particular of their cultural logic. But whereas archaeologists have developed productive links with the paleosciences, historians have, on the whole, remained muted voices in the debate until recently.

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Do human societies from around the world exhibit similarities in the way that they are structured, and show commonalities in the ways that they have evolved? These are long-standing questions that have proven difficult to answer. To test between competing hypotheses, we constructed a massive repository of historical and archaeological information known as "Seshat: Global History Databank." We systematically coded data on 414 societies from 30 regions around the world spanning the last 10,000 years.

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In our 2016 article in Scientific Reports, we advanced a new hypothesis for the Mongol withdrawal from Hungary in 1242 CE, based on a joint analysis of climatic, environmental, and historical data. The re-evaluation now offered by Pinke et al. casts doubt on this hypothesis.

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This article engages the much-debated role of mathematics in Bacon's philosophy and inductive method at large. The many references to mathematics in Bacon's works are considered in the context of the humanist reform of the curriculum studiorum and, in particular, through a comparison with the kinds of natural and intellectual subtlety as they are defined by many sixteenth-century authors, including Cardano, Scaliger and Montaigne. Additionally, this article gives a nuanced background to the 'subtlety' commonly thought to have been eschewed by Bacon and by Bacon's self-proclaimed followers in the Royal Society of London.

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A historical account of the doctor's bag.

Aust Fam Physician

September 2016

MBBS, MA, MMed, GradDipA, DipVen, GradCertAddSt, is Honorary Senior Lecturer, Department of General Practice, and Honorary Research Associate, School of Historical Studies, Monash University, Melbourne, Victoria.

Background: A household phrase of yesteryear was the doctor's 'little black bag'. Where did this phrase come from and how did it evolve?

Objective: The objective of the article is to outline the history of the medical bag and its contents, from early times to the present day, by using library research methodology.

Discussion: The first mention of a medical bag is in the Hippocratic Corpus around 350 BCE.

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The Mongol invasion of Eastern Europe, and especially its sudden withdrawal from Hungary in 1242 CE, has generated much speculation and an array of controversial theories. None of them, however, considered multifaceted environmental drivers and the coupled analysis of historical reports and natural archives. Here we investigate annually resolved, absolutely dated and spatially explicit paleoclimatic evidence between 1230 and 1250 CE.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study examines the impact of the Barbarian invasions in medieval Europe (400-800 AD) by analyzing mitochondrial DNA from 102 burial specimens of the Lombards in Northwestern Italy.
  • Researchers found that the genetic diversity in these historical samples did not indicate significant heterogeneity, suggesting a potential continuity with some modern populations.
  • Results from genealogical simulations indicated that while most modern samples were shown to be distinct from the medieval population, evidence of genetic persistence was noted in one specific location, highlighting the need for larger studies to better understand medieval migrations and their effects.
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New findings in the identification of adult vitamin D deficiency osteomalacia: Results from a large-scale study.

Int J Paleopathol

December 2014

Department of Anthropology, Faculty of Social Sciences, McMaster University, 1280 Main Street West, Hamilton, Ontario L8S 4LH, Canada.

This is the first systematic large-scale palaeopathological study of adult vitamin D deficiency osteomalacia. One thousand one hundred and eighty-one skeletons from multiple urban contexts in post-mediaeval England (c. AD 1700-1855) were analysed.

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The dangerous dead: dissecting the criminal corpse.

Lancet

July 2013

Medical Humanities Research Centre, School of Historical Studies, University of Leicester, Leicester LE1 7RH, UK.

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'Those, that die by reason of their madness': dying insane in London, 1629-1830.

Hist Psychiatry

March 2012

School of Historical Studies, Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne NE1 7RU, UK.

Dying insane provoked 'great fear, and apprehension' in the minds of men and women. Death as a lunatic disrupted deathbed performance and rendered the victim incapable at law. This article examines lunacy as a cause of death in the metropolis between 1629 and 1830.

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Death and the dead-house in Victorian asylums: necroscopy versus mourning at the Royal Edinburgh Asylum, C. 1832-1901.

Hist Psychiatry

March 2012

School of Historical Studies & Northern Centre for the History of Medicine, Newcastle University, Armstrong Building, Newcastle upon NE1 7RU, UK.

This article examines the management and meaning of post-mortem examinations, and the spatial ordering of patients' death, dissection and burial at the Victorian asylum, referencing a range of institutional contexts and exploiting a case study of the Royal Edinburgh Asylum. The routinizing of dissection and the development of the dead-house from a more marginal asylum sector to a lynchpin of laboratory medicine is stressed. External and internal pressure to modernize pathological research facilities is assessed alongside governmental, public and professional critiques of variable necroscopy practices.

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This paper draws on evidence from a range of sources to consider the extent to which World War II served as a turning point in the employment opportunities open to women chemists in Britain. It argues that wartime conditions expanded women's access to some areas of employment, but that these opportunities represented, in many ways, an expansion of existing openings rather than wholly new ones, and not all of them proved permanent. Instead, women chemists benefited more permanently from increased state expenditure on higher education and on research and development after the war.

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