Are brands prepared for a consumer base that's simultaneously more confident and more cautious? Agility requires not just reacting to current consumer behavior but anticipating the shifts to come. It also requires a deep understanding of the nuances within different consumer segments, particularly as generational behaviors diverge. Today, we're going to talk about the evolving landscape of consumer confidence, especially among Gen Z and Millennials, and what this means for brands navigating the current market. To help me discuss this topic, I'd like to welcome, Eric Miao, Chief Strategy Officer at Attentive. About Eric Miao Eric Miao on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/eric-miao-62313b9/ Resources Attentive: https://www.attentive.com The Agile Brand podcast is brought to you by TEKsystems. Learn more here: https://www.teksystems.com/versionnextnow Don't Miss MAICON 2025, October 14-16 in Cleveland - the event bringing together the brights minds and leading voices in AI. Use Code AGILE150 for $150 off registration. Go here to register: https://bit.ly/agile150 Connect with Greg on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/gregkihlstrom Don't miss a thing: get the latest episodes, sign up for our newsletter and more: https://www.theagilebrand.show Check out The Agile Brand Guide website with articles, insights, and Martechipedia, the wiki for marketing technology: https://www.agilebrandguide.com The Agile Brand is produced by Missing Link—a Latina-owned strategy-driven, creatively fueled production co-op. From ideation to creation, they craft human connections through intelligent, engaging and informative content. https://www.missinglink.company…
For the Medical Record is a podcast from Johns Hopkins University's Center for Medical Humanities and Social Medicine, hosted by Postdoctoral Fellow Mia Levenson and Research Associate Richard Del Rio. In these episodes, we talk to people affiliated with the Center to discuss their research within the history of medicine and the medical humanities. We ask them why their work matters, and how history and the humanities can help us to better understand debates and practices within medicine and care today. - - - - - Logo: We would like to thank Karen Klinedinst (Art Director, Graphic Arts) and Courtney Weber (Graphic Designer), based in the Johns Hopkins Department of Art as Applied to Medicine, for creating this logo for our podcast. The background image is a drawing by Max Brödel (1870-1941), the first director of the Department of Art as Applied to Medicine. It shows the interior of an ear, making it a perfect image to illustrate our auditory output. Music: From Uppbeat: https://uppbeat.io/t/sensho/coffee-break License code: QHALB6CTD8DSD3FP Production: Audio and overall production by Christy Slobogin
For the Medical Record is a podcast from Johns Hopkins University's Center for Medical Humanities and Social Medicine, hosted by Postdoctoral Fellow Mia Levenson and Research Associate Richard Del Rio. In these episodes, we talk to people affiliated with the Center to discuss their research within the history of medicine and the medical humanities. We ask them why their work matters, and how history and the humanities can help us to better understand debates and practices within medicine and care today. - - - - - Logo: We would like to thank Karen Klinedinst (Art Director, Graphic Arts) and Courtney Weber (Graphic Designer), based in the Johns Hopkins Department of Art as Applied to Medicine, for creating this logo for our podcast. The background image is a drawing by Max Brödel (1870-1941), the first director of the Department of Art as Applied to Medicine. It shows the interior of an ear, making it a perfect image to illustrate our auditory output. Music: From Uppbeat: https://uppbeat.io/t/sensho/coffee-break License code: QHALB6CTD8DSD3FP Production: Audio and overall production by Christy Slobogin
Welcome back to another episode of For the Medical Record! This week, Richard and Mia talk with Bryan Doerries, artistic director of Theater of War Productions. They discuss Bryan's recent production of A Refutation , where actors dramatically read documents related to the 1793 yellow fever epidemic in Philadelphia, which was performed at several locations around the DC/Baltimore area, including Johns Hopkins Hospital. For more information about A Refutation , you can visit Theater of War Productions' website . For a full recording of the performance at the Union Memorial United Methodist Church in West Baltimore, click here . --- For the Medical Record is a podcast from Johns Hopkins University's Center for Medical Humanities and Social Medicine, hosted by Research Associate Richard Del Rio and Postdoctoral Fellow Mia Levenson . New episodes are released biweekly. In these episodes, we talk to people affiliated with the Center to discuss their research within the history of medicine and the medical humanities. We ask them why their work matters, and how history and the humanities can help us to better understand debates and practices within medicine and care today.…
It's summer, which means scholars are heading to the archives! Looking down the barrel at their own upcoming research trips, Richard and Mia talk with Michael Seminara, the curator for the historical collection at the Institute of the History of Medicine at Johns Hopkins. They chat with him about curating the collection, putting up exhibitions, and what he wished scholars knew about working with archivists. Recent Articles about the Collection: New to the Historical Collection Filming at the Institute Hearing History: The Robert J. Ruben Collection of Otolaryngological Instruments --- For the Medical Record is a podcast from Johns Hopkins University's Center for Medical Humanities and Social Medicine, hosted by Research Associate Richard Del Rio and Postdoctoral Fellow Mia Levenson . New episodes are released biweekly. In these episodes, we talk to people affiliated with the Center to discuss their research within the history of medicine and the medical humanities. We ask them why their work matters, and how history and the humanities can help us to better understand debates and practices within medicine and care today.…
In this episode, Richard and Mia talk with Mary Fissell , the Inaugural J. Mario Molina Professor of the History of Medicine at Johns Hopkins University, about her new book, " Pushback: The 2,500-Year Fight to Thwart Women by Restricting Abortion. " This is a great book and Mary is such a wealth of knowledge about this history. Related Works: Jennifer Wright, Madame Restell: The Life, Death, and Resurrection of Old New York's Most Fabulous, Fearless, and Infamous Abortionist Nicholas L. Syrett, The Trials of Madame Restell Nineteenth-Century America’s Most Infamous Female Physician and the Campaign to Make Abortion a Crime " ‘Drama of Life Before Birth’: Lennart Nilsson’s Landmark 1965 Photo Essay ," Life Magazine . Kathleen Crowther, Policing Pregnant Bodies: From Ancient Greece to Post-Roe America Johanna Schoen, Abortion after Roe --- For the Medical Record is a podcast from Johns Hopkins University's Center for Medical Humanities and Social Medicine, hosted by Research Associate Richard Del Rio and Postdoctoral Fellow Mia Levenson . New episodes are released biweekly. In these episodes, we talk to people affiliated with the Center to discuss their research within the history of medicine and the medical humanities. We ask them why their work matters, and how history and the humanities can help us to better understand debates and practices within medicine and care today.…
In this (not-so-mini) episode, Richard and Mia chat with Tufts University history professor, Alisha Rankin, about the paper she presented for the 29th Hideyo Ngouchi Lecture and as part of the Johns Hopkins Program in the History of Science, Medicine & Technology's colloquium series . Her paper, "The Skillful Surgeon: Surgical Expertise and Contested Authority in Early Modern Europe," was about these manuscripts made by Renaissance-era surgeons that illustrated surgical procedures. This is a bit of a longer mini episode -- we had so much fun chatting we simply could not cut it down! The Wellcome Collection has digital scans of some of manuscripts discussed: Caspar Stromayr Georg Bartisch The Franciscan copy of Bartisch's manuscript is here . The Wellcome Collection also has a short blog post on Bartisch's manuscripts . Other works mentions: Stephanie Leitch, Early Modern Print Media and the Art of Observation: Training the Literate Eye Susanna Berger, " Georg Bartisch’s Ophthalmodouleia and His Theory of Painting and Drawing " --- For the Medical Record is a podcast from Johns Hopkins University's Center for Medical Humanities and Social Medicine, hosted by Research Associate Richard Del Rio and Postdoctoral Fellow Mia Levenson . New episodes are released biweekly. In these episodes, we talk to people affiliated with the Center to discuss their research within the history of medicine and the medical humanities. We ask them why their work matters, and how history and the humanities can help us to better understand debates and practices within medicine and care today.…
In this episode, Richard and Mia are joined by Lan Li , professor of the history of medicine at Johns Hopkins University and director of the Online Program in the History of Medicine, to talk about their new book, Body Maps: Improvising Meridians and Nerves in Global Chinese Medicine . Works referenced in the episode: Sean Hsiang-lin Lei, Neither Donkey nor Horse: Medicine in the Struggle over China’s Modernity Lorraine Daston and Peter L. Galison, Objectivity Shigehisa Kuriyama, The Expressiveness of the Body and the Divergence of Greek and Chinese Medicine --- For the Medical Record is a podcast from Johns Hopkins University's Center for Medical Humanities and Social Medicine, hosted by Research Associate Richard Del Rio and Postdoctoral Fellow Mia Levenson . New episodes are released biweekly. In these episodes, we talk to people affiliated with the Center to discuss their research within the history of medicine and the medical humanities. We ask them why their work matters, and how history and the humanities can help us to better understand debates and practices within medicine and care today.…
In this episode, Richard and Mia talk to Julia Cummiskey , a professor of the history of medicine right here at Johns Hopkins University. She chats with us about her new book, Virus Research in 20th-Century Uganda: Between Local and Global . For more about the Uganda Virus Research Institute, visit https://www.uvri.go.ug/ For more about the Rakai Health Sciences Program, visit https://www.rhsp.org/ A note from Julia: "I wish I had mentioned how important their work is and how much it means when they get donations to help support that work!" Works referenced in the episode: Marissa Mika, Africanizing Oncology: Creativity, Crisis, and Cancer in Uganda Adriana Petryna, When Experiments Travel: Clinical Trials and the Global Search for Human Subjects Johanna Crane, Scrambling for Africa: AIDS, Expertise, and the Rise of American Global Health Science Robin Wolffe Scheffler, A Contagious Cause: The American Hunt for Cancer Viruses and the Rise of Molecular Medicine (not referenced in the episode but a great book about the race to discover oncoviruses!) --- For the Medical Record is a podcast from Johns Hopkins University's Center for Medical Humanities and Social Medicine, hosted by Research Associated Richard Del Rio and Postdoctoral Fellow Mia Levenson . New episodes are released biweekly. In these episodes, we talk to people affiliated with the Center to discuss their research within the history of medicine and the medical humanities. We ask them why their work matters, and how history and the humanities can help us to better understand debates and practices within medicine and care today.…
In this mini episode, Richard and Mia talk to Bharat Venkat , a professor of anthropology at UCLA, about the research he presented at the Johns Hopkins Program in the History of Science, Medicine & Technology's colloquium series and his upcoming book project, "Swelter: A History of Our Bodies in a Warming World." Related links for Bharat's work: UCLA Heat Lab " Carceral heat exposure as harmful design: An integrative model for understanding the health impacts of heat on incarcerated people in the United States" ( Social Science & Medicine , 2025) "Through a glass darkly: race, thermal sensation and the nervous body in late colonial India" ( British Journal of the History of Science , 2022) "What Not to Wear" ( LA Review of Books , 2023) "California will finally have indoor heat standards for workplaces — with a cruel exception" ( LA Times , 2024) “L.A. loves food trucks. With more heat waves, they can be dangerous for people working in them” ( LA Times , 2023) "How historic redlining led to extreme heat in the Watts community" ( LA Times , 2022) --- For the Medical Record is a Podcast from Johns Hopkins University's Center for Medical Humanities and Social Medicine, hosted by Research Associated Richard Del Rio and Postdoctoral Fellow Mia Levenson . New episodes are released biweekly. In these episodes, we talk to people affiliated with the Center to discuss their research within the history of medicine and the medical humanities. We ask them why their work matters, and how history and the humanities can help us to better understand debates and practices within medicine and care today.…
We are SO back!! After a brief hiatus, For the Medical Record is back with new hosts, Richard Del Rio and Mia Levenson. For the Medical Record is a Podcast from Johns Hopkins University's Center for Medical Humanities and Social Medicine, hosted by Research Associated Richard Del Rio and Postdoctoral Fellow Mia Levenson . First episode drops on March 31 and new episodes will be out every two weeks. In these episodes, we talk to people affiliated with the Center to discuss their research within the history of medicine and the medical humanities. We ask them why their work matters, and how history and the humanities can help us to better understand debates and practices within medicine and care today.…
Join us in our conversation with Nicole Labruto , anthropologist and director of the Medicine, Science, and the Humanities undergraduate major here at Johns Hopkins. In this episode, we discuss both Dr. Labruto’s own anthropological research – on sugar cane, science, the environment, and society – as well as the importance of offering an interdisciplinary education in the medical humanities and science, technology, and society to undergraduate students. In addition to speaking about her fascinating research, Dr. Labruto also shares several of her pedagogical tools and tips for teaching students in STS and the medical humanities. As always, we hope you enjoy listening! But we especially hope that you enjoy this episode, as it is Antoine and Christy’s last one as co-hosts. “For the Medical Record” will take a break before re-starting with new co-hosts from the Center for Medical Humanities & Social Medicine community. Thank you for the engagement, listens, and encouragement! PEOPLE AND RESOURCES MENTIONED Johns Hopkins COVID-19 Map Kamna Balhara (you can listen to our “For the Medical Record” episode with Kamna Balhara and Nate Irvin here ) Franz Boas Immanuel Wallerstein Slum Dwellers International Maryland Institute College of Art (MICA) Mary Poovey, A History of the Modern Fact: Problems of Knowledge in the Sciences of Wealth and Society (1998) Lorraine Daston and Peter Galison, Objectivity (2007) Howard Zinn Sidney W. Mintz, Sweetness in Power: The Place of Sugar in Modern History (1986) Stuart B. Schwartz, Sugar Plantations in the Formation of Brazilian Society: Bahia, 1550-1835 (1986) Londa Schiebinger, " Exotic abortifacients: the global politics of plants in the 18th century ” (2000) Jerry Burgess Baltimore Compost Collective The South Baltimore Community Land Trust Black Yield Institute Marvin Hayes Shashawnda Campbell Meleny Thomas Greg Sawtell Eric Jackson Nicole Fabricant…
In this mini episode, we speak with Matthew Klingle about the paper that he presented at the Johns Hopkins Program in the History of Science, Medicine & Technology's colloquium series , titled "'Wear and Tear': An Ecology of Diabetes, Stress, and Discrimination."
Join us in our conversation with Wendy Shields , Senior Scientist at the Bloomberg School of Public Health, and Alexander Parry , PhD candidate in History of Medicine. These two are part of a wider research network and team spearheading the field of injury studies, in part represented by a hybrid, internationally focused conference in March 2024 called “ Rethinking Injuries: Interdisciplinary Approaches to Harm, Safety, and Society .” Join us in our discussions about why studying injuries is important, and how scholars from many diverse fields can contribute to injury studies. Thank you for listening! PEOPLE AND GROUPS MENTIONED Webpage for “Rethinking Injuries: Interdisciplinary Approaches to Harm, Safety, and Society” Bloomberg Center for Injury Research and Policy Graham Mooney (listen to his “For the Medical Record” episode here ) Arwen Mohun Iro Filippaki RACE (Reparative Arts in Community Engagement) Conference Tendon Magazine’s “Injuries” Issue Susan Baker To join the Injury Studies Research Network, email aparry2@jhmi.edu…
In this mini episode, we talk to Aishah Scott about the research that she presented at the Johns Hopkins Program in the History of Science, Medicine & Technology's colloquium series , titled "Trickledown Respectability Politics and HIV/AIDS in Black America."
Join us in our conversation with Lauren Small, writer, novelist, and academic here at the Johns Hopkins Hospital. In this episode, we discuss the roles, purposes, and benefits of narrative medicine, particularly in relation to the AfterWards program that Lauren runs. Our discussion of Lauren’s own historical fiction works takes us from an influenza-stricken Baltimore of the early twentieth century, to a massacre in nineteenth-century Colorado, to stories about the First Crusade in the eleventh century. In addition to her own books, Lauren helps us build a fantastic reading list of novels touching on many of the themes of this podcast. Thank you for listening, and happy reading! PEOPLE AND WORKS MENTIONED Division of Narrative Medicine at Columbia University Kendrick Lamar “i” Music Video Loren Ludwig Lauren Small, The Eye Begins to See (2023) Lauren Small, The Hanging of Ruben Ashford (2022) Lauren Small, Wolf Constellation (2018) Samuel K. Roberts, Infectious Fear (2009) Richard Wright, Native Son (1940) Lauren Small, Choke Creek (2009) American Association for the History of Medicine 2024 Conference Rita Charon Pat Barker’s Regeneration Trilogy (1990s) Hilary Mantel, Wolf Hall (2009) Barry Unsworth Geraldine Brooks, Year of Wonders (2001) Lauren Groff, Matrix (2021) Maggie O’Farrell, Hamnet (2020) Philip Roth, Nemesis (2010) Pat Barker, Toby’s Room (2012) John Singer Sargent, The Four Doctors (1906) Anton Chekhov…
In this mini episode, we talk to Pablo F. Gómez about the research that he presented at the Johns Hopkins Program in the History of Science, Medicine & Technology's colloquium series , titled "Slave Trading and the Imagination of the Quantifiable Body in the Early Modern Atlantic."
Join us in our conversation with Nathan Irvin and Kamna Balhara , both physicians and professors in the Emergency Medicine Department here at Johns Hopkins. In this episode, we hear about the phenomenal work that these two are doing spearheading Health Humanities at Hopkins Emergency Medicine (H3EM) . In particular, we discuss why humanities are vital for physicians working at the “front door of the hospital” (the emergency room), which exists at the nexus of the hospital and the community, and the nexus of society and health. Thanks for listening! RESOURCES AND PEOPLE MENTIONED Drawing Blood podcast episode, “ Morphine Addiction, Decadence & Degeneration, and Fin-de-Siècle Paris ” To see some winners of the creative arts submission competition, go here and here . Tendon , the literary and visual arts magazine from the Center for Medical Humanities & Social Medicine Health Humanities Fellowship RACE Conference (Reparative Arts and Community Engagement) , October 5 – 8, 2023 Dr. Jeremy Greene Latoya Ruby Frazier Kondwani Fidel Devin Allen Dr. Gabor David Kelen Medicine, Science, and the Humanities Program Beth Macy, Dopesick…
In this mini episode, we talk to Joseph Leonardo Vignone about the research that he presented at the Johns Hopkins Program in the History of Science, Medicine & Technology's colloquium series , titled "Remembering Bodies: A Medieval Islamic History of Human Enhancement."
In this mini episode, we speak to Graham Mooney about the paper that he presented at the Johns Hopkins Program in the History of Science, Medicine & Technology’s colloquium series titled “How Public Health Makes 'Behavior': Alcohol Programs in Post World War II Baltimore.”
In this mini episode, we speak to Zubin Mistry about the paper that he presented at the Johns Hopkins Program in the History of Science, Medicine & Technology’s colloquium series titled “The Problem of Monastic Gynecology: Reproduction, Religion and Medicine in Western Europe before 1100.”
In this mini episode, we speak to Rana Hogarth about the paper that she presented at the Johns Hopkins Program in the History of Science, Medicine & Technology’s colloquium series titled “The Science of Skin Color: Miscegenation and the Eugenic Gaze in the Early Twentieth Century.”
Join us in our conversation with Jolien Gijbels , a Fulbright and Belgian American Educational Foundation (BAEF) visiting scholar in the Department of the History of Medicine at Johns Hopkins University. In this episode, primarily we discuss finding the patient’s voice in the archive, and how listening to the patient and other marginalized groups is vital to the history of medicine and to the medical humanities. We also talk medical consent, radical gynecological surgery and difficult births, and digital humanities methods such as text mining. Thanks for listening! SOURCES AND SCHOLARS MENTIONED The Chesney Medical Archives Roy Porter, “ The Patient’s View: Doing Medical History from Below ” (1985) Marisa Fuentes, Dispossessed Lives: Enslaved Women, Violence, and the Archive (2016) Black Beyond Data’s episode of “For the Medical Record” Chanelle Delameillieure…
In this mini episode, we talk to Eram Alam about the research that she presented as part of the Johns Hopkins Program in the History of Science, Medicine, & Technology's colloquium series , titled "The Logistical Body: Reflections on Medicine and Movement."
Join us in our conversation with science journalist and Johns Hopkins History of Medicine PhD student Jessica Leigh Hester about her recent book Sewer (Bloomsbury, 2022). We discuss the medical, social, and structural intricacies of sewers – and sewer stewardship – as well as Jessica’s PhD research on graverobbing and the display of human remains. Thanks for listening! SOURCES AND SCHOLARS MENTIONED Jessica Leigh Hester, Mundane Madness , Atlas Obscura (2018) Eric Grundhauser, “ Most of the World’s Bread Clips Are Made by a Single Company: A brief history of the Kwik Lok Closure ,” Atlas Obscura (2017) Alison Kinney, Hood (2016) Susan Bordo, TV (2021) COVIDPoops19 Call for Papers for "Skeletons in the Academy" symposium Robert Mcfarlane Pablo Gómez Sasha Turner Saidiya Hartman Making and Knowing Project, Pamela Smith Elizabeth O’Brien Alexandre White (see our episode with him here )…
In this mini episode, we talk to Courtney Thompson about the research that she presented as part of the Johns Hopkins Program in the History of Science, Medicine, & Technology's colloquium series , titled "A Calculus of Compassion: Emotion, Medicine, and Identity in Late-Nineteenth-Century America."…
Join us in our conversation with medical student Walker Magrath about his recent work as a scholarly concentrator in the history of medicine. In 2022, Walker published an article in Annals of Internal Medicine titled “ The Fall of the Nation’s First Gender-Affirming Surgery Clinic .” In this episode, we discuss the history of this gender-affirming surgery clinic here at Johns Hopkins, how studying the medical humanities and medical history can improve medical education and practice, and the continued struggle for equity in LGBTQIA+ healthcare. Thanks for listening! SOURCES, GROUPS, AND SCHOLARS MENTIONED Jeremy Greene Gay Men’s Health Crisis Charalampos Siotos, et al., “ Origins of Gender Affirmation Surgery: The History of the First Gender Identity Clinic in the United States at Johns Hopkins ” (2019) Jon K. Meyer, MD; Donna J. Reter, “ Sex Reassignment: Follow Up ” (1979) Theresa Gaffney, “ ‘History is repeating itself’: The story of the nation’s first clinic for gender-affirming surgery ” (2022) Alex Keuroghlian , MD, MPH (Harvard) Jules Gill-Peterson…
In this mini episode, we talk to Alexandre White about his new book Epidemic Orientalism: Race, Capital, and the Governance of Infectious Disease (Stanford University Press, 2023). Dr. White's book launch was part of the Johns Hopkins Program in the History of Science, Medicine, and Technology's colloquium series .…
Join us in our conversation with Caleb Alexander , MD, MS, and Jason Chernesky , PhD, about the Opioid Industry Documents Archive . Both based at Johns Hopkins University, Dr. Alexander is a practicing internist and epidemiologist, and Dr. Chernesky is a historian of medicine and the Council on Library and Information Resources (CLIR) Opioid Industry Research Postdoctoral Fellow. Taking the OIDA's collection of documents as the starting point, we discuss commercial determinants of health, geographies of empathy across American drug epidemics, what litigation documents can tell us about public health, and writing the “second draft” of the story of the opioid epidemic. SOURCES, PROJECTS, AND SCHOLARS MENTIONED Industry Documents Library Truth Tobacco Industry Documents Polina Ilieva Rachel Taketa G. Caleb Alexander, et al. “ The Opioid Industry Documents Archive: A Living Digital Repository ” (2022) Cecília Tomori David Herzberg, White Market Drugs: Big Pharma and the Hidden History of Addiction in America (2020) Caroline Jean Acker, Creating the American Junkie: Addiction Research in the Classic Era of Narcotic Control (2006) Tom Lippincott Beth Macy, Dopesick: Dealers, Doctors, and the Drug Company that Addicted America (2018)…
In our fourth mini episode, we talk to Dominique Tobbell about the lecture that she presented as part of the Johns Hopkins Program in the History of Science, Medicine & Technology’s colloquium series , titled “'Mom and Tots': Nursing and the Politics of Community Health in 1960s' Detroit.”
Join us in our conversation with Jessica Marie Johnson , Lauren Rubin , and Alexandre (Sasha) White about their leadership of the Mellon-funded Black Beyond Data project. Johnson is a historian and digital humanist at Hopkins, Rubin is the Director of Development at the St. Francis Neighborhood Center in Baltimore, and White is in the departments of the history of medicine and sociology at Hopkins. Alongside their colleague Kim Gallon , these individuals lead the project in its re-evaluation of data through the digital humanities. In this episode, we talk about how data can be used by and for communities, the Black digital humanities, and how Black humanity can help to see data in a different, radical way. SOURCES, PROJECTS, AND SCHOLARS MENTIONED St. Francis Neighborhood Center Sayeed Choudhury Covid Black Patricia Hswe Jeremy Greene (listen to our episode with Jeremy Greene here ) New Generation Scholars The African Diaspora Alliance Ink Sweat and Tears Runaways London Marisa Parham The REPAIR Project Heidi Nicholls Samuel Kelton Roberts, Infectious Fear: Politics, Disease, and the Health Effects of Segregation (2009) Jessica Marie Johnson, “4DH: + 1 Black Code / Black Femme Forms of Knowledge and Practice” (2018) Life x Code: Digital Humanities Against Enclosure Center for Black Digital Research #DigBlk , Pennsylvania State University African American History, Culture and Digital Humanities (AADHum) , University of Maryland, College Park Gabrielle Foreman Jessica Marie Johnson & Kismet Nuñez, “Alter Egos and Infinite Literacies, Part III: How to Build a Real Gyrl in 3 Easy Steps” (2015) Black Press Research Collective Moya Bailey, Misogynoir Transformed: Black Women’s Digital Resistance (2021) Sarah J. Jackson, Moya Bailey, and Brooke Foucault Welles, #HashtagActivism: Networks of Race and Gender Justice (2020) Alexis Pauline Gumbs Sangodare Wallace adrienne maree brown Abdul Alkalimat Alondra Nelson Jennifer L. Morgan, Reckoning with Slavery: Gender, Kinship, and Capitalism in the Early Black Atlantic (2021) Vincent Brown, History Design Studio Britt Rusert Autumn Womack Rebecca Hall, Wake: The Hidden History of Women-Led Slave Revolts (2021) Stuart Hall Marisa Fuentes Christina Sharpe Saidiya Hartman Édouard Glissant William Kentridge Black Beyond Data Reading Group Catherine Knight Steele Brandeis Marshall Dorothy Berry No Boundaries Coalition Tony Warner, Black History Walks…
In our third mini episode, we talk to Beatrix Hoffman about the lecture that she presented as part of the Johns Hopkins Program in the History of Science, Medicine & Technology’s colloquium series , titled “Borders of Care: A History of Immigration, Migration and the Right to Health Care.”
Join us in our conversation with Jeremy Greene , MD PhD. Jeremy is the William H. Welch Professor of Medicine and the History of Medicine, as well as the director of the Johns Hopkins Center for Medical Humanities & Social Medicine (which sponsors this podcast) and the Johns Hopkins Department of the History of Medicine. In this episode, we talk with Jeremy about the symbiotic role of medicine and the humanities from his perspective as an MD PhD; about how history can “reshape the limits of the possible” and push back against the “inertia of entrenched power”; about his most recent book, The Doctor Who Wasn’t There: Technology, History, and the Limits of Telehealth ; and about how and why the medical humanities must be a “critical” field. SOURCES AND SCHOLARS MENTIONED Jeremy Greene, Prescribing by Numbers: Drugs and the Definition of Disease (2007) Jeremy Greene, Generic: The Unbranding of Modern Medicine (2014) Jeremy Greene, The Doctor Who Wasn’t There: Technology, History, and the Limits of Telehealth (2022) David Chanoff and Louis W. Sullivan, We’ll Fight It Out Here: A History of the Ongoing Struggle for Health Equity (2022) Mary Fissell’s episode of “For the Medical Record” The Flexner Report Keith Wailoo, “ Patients are Humans Too: The Emergence of the Medical Humanities ” (2022) Charles Rosenberg Paul Farmer , Partners in Health Allan Brandt Center of Africana Studies Event with Sadiya Hartman Bulletin of the History of Medicine Max Liboiron and Josh Lepawsky, Discard Studies (2022)…
In our second mini episode, we talk to Mary Fissell about the lecture that she presented as part of the Johns Hopkins Program in the History of Science, Medicine & Technology’s colloquium series , titled “Long Before Roe: A Victorian Abortion Case.” This special colloquium presentation was given on the occasion of Mary Fissell’s endowment as the J. Mario Molina Endowed Professorship in the History of Medicine.…
Join us in our conversation with Lan Li, PhD – a scholar of global East Asian medicine, acupuncture, sensation, and histories of science – in which we discuss how to take your work seriously without taking yourself too seriously, as well as thinking about situated, embodied practices. Using Lan’s varied career as a historian, media producer, and research director, we think through different methods for disseminating research, medical knowledge, and medical histories. SOURCES AND SCHOLARS MENTIONED Interactive article that touches on topics covered in Lan’s forthcoming book: Lan A. Li, “ Sunk from Sight: Mapping the Fluid Body ” (2020) Christine J. Walley and Chris Boebel (MIT / Exit Zero film) Shigehisa Kuriyama Lan A. Li, “ Emotional Spleens: Death by Overthinking in Classical Chinese Texts ” (2022) Alexander Wragge-Morley and Metaphors of the Mind Pierce Salguero , The Jivaka Project Medicine, Science, and the Humanities (MSH) program at Johns Hopkins Walter Rodney Center for Black Brown and Queer Studies Achille Mbembe, Necropolitics (2019) Ahmed Ragab Jeremy Greene Elizabeth O’Brien Alexandre (Sasha) White Graham Mooney Nathaniel Comfort Mary Fissell…
This is our first installment in a series of mini episodes of “For the Medical Record” that will focus on the scholars invited to present at the Colloquia of the Johns Hopkins Program in the History of Science, Medicine & Technology . In this episode, we talked to Oluwatoyin Oduntan and Jonathan Roberts about their paper “Decolonizing Africa and the Origins of Modern Medicine," which was presented at Hopkins on September 29, 2022. To watch some of the “Colloquially Speaking” videos from previous years: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCCNPqHyu7giQm8dD-DhfCJw/videos…
Join us in our conversation with Carolyn Sufrin , MD, PhD, in which we discuss how “reproduction is everything,” particularly in her research and advocacy around the reproductive wellness of incarcerated individuals. Working on the now and thinking through what a future system may look like, we explore with Carolyn: “what does it mean to care in a space of punishment?” SOURCES AND SCHOLARS MENTIONED Carolyn Sufrin, Jailcare: Finding the Safety Net for Women Behind Bars (2017) Advocacy and Research on Reproductive Wellness of Incarcerated People Clifford Geertz John and Jean Comaroff Carlos Martinez Panel chaired by Carolyn Sufrin: “ Eugenics and Population Control: Racism and Reproduction in Public Health ” Michel Foucault Robin D. G. Kelley Ian Whitmarsh Angela Garcia Lorna Rhodes Dorothy Roberts Loretta Ross Monica McLemore Lisa Stevenson Michele Goodwin Crystal Hayes Article by Carolyn Sufrin on "complicity consciousness," which was just published: Carolyn Sufrin, " Complicity Consciousness: The Dual Practice of Ethnography and Clinical Caregiving in Carceral Settings "…
Welcome to For the Medical Record! Full episodes coming soon! For the Medical Record is a podcast from Johns Hopkins University's Center for Medical Humanities and Social Medicine, hosted by Postdoctoral Fellows Christy Slobogin and Antoine Johnson. In these episodes, we talk to people affiliated with the Center to discuss their research within the history of medicine and the medical humanities. We ask them why their work matters, and how history and the humanities can help us to better understand debates and practices within medicine and care today. Link to the Keith Wailoo article discussed: https://www.amacad.org/sites/default/files/publication/downloads/Daedalus_Su22_15_Wailoo.pdf…
플레이어 FM에 오신것을 환영합니다!
플레이어 FM은 웹에서 고품질 팟캐스트를 검색하여 지금 바로 즐길 수 있도록 합니다. 최고의 팟캐스트 앱이며 Android, iPhone 및 웹에서도 작동합니다. 장치 간 구독 동기화를 위해 가입하세요.