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Call for Papers: Medical Heritage Library Conference 2020

The Medical Heritage Library is hosting an online conference to celebrate a decade of digitizing primary resources in the history of medicine on Friday November 13, 2020. 

The Medical Heritage Library is a digital curation collaborative among some of the world’s leading medical libraries. The conference seeks to highlight research, teaching, and learning outcomes for our open-access collection of texts, films, images, and audio material in medical and health sciences and related subject matter. These materials represent a wide range of historical periods, linguistic traditions, and scientific cultures, and we encourage proposals that reflect the scope of our medical heritage collections. We seek to forge new relationships and strengthen existing ones with scholars, educators, and allied health professionals, in medical humanities, digital humanities, library and information science, medical history, art history, critical race studies, cultural studies, disability studies, philosophy, and bioethics.  

We invite proposals on a range of topics related to our collections, including, but not limited to:

Affect management and practitioner burnout

Collections as data

Disability studies and medicine

History of sexuality

Local and indigenous medical knowledge

Lung disease and cigarette smoking

Medical museums

Medicine and the arts

Medicine and literature

Patient experience(s)

Public health

Race science and medicine

State medical societies

Teaching the pandemic(s)

Vaccines and anti-vaccination

Women and medicine

We ask that proposals reference at least one work digitized by the Medical Heritage Library, or discuss how the collections informed the research behind the presentation. Please see our website at www.medicalheritage.org and our Internet Archive collections archive.org/details/medicalheritagelibrary for more details.  

We welcome proposals of non-traditional presentation formats, such as workshops, lightning talks, collaborative discussions, digital demonstrations, and creative performances, as well as traditional academic papers and panels.  

Please submit an abstract of 300 words or less and a bio of 100 words or less through our abstract submission form by September 18, 2020. Make sure to note the intended form of your contribution, and provide an email contact for all authors. If you have any questions, please contact us at conference.mhl@gmail.com 

We look forward to reading your submissions.

10th Anniversary Conference


The Medical Heritage Library, Inc. is pleased to announce its 10th Anniversary Virtual Conference Program

Friday, November 13, 2020

11:00 – 5:00 (EDT)
Via ZOOM
The link to the event will be distributed to registered attendees on Thursday, November 12.

Register via EventBrite: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/10th-anniversary-conference-tickets-125977216245

Program

11:00am-12:00pm
Welcome and Keynote 

  • Welcome: Emily R. Novak Gustainis, President, Medical Heritage Library, Inc.; Deputy Director of the Center for the History of Medicine at the Francis A Countway Library of Medicine at Harvard University
  • Keynote Speaker: Dr. Jaipreet Virdi, Assistant Professor for the Department of History at the University of Delaware
    Digitized Disability Histories

12:00pm-1:00pm

Presentations

Moderator: Robin Naughton, Vice-President, Medical Heritage Library, Inc.; Assistant Professor, Web and Digital Services Librarian, Queens College, CUNY

1:00-2:30
Break

1:15pm-2:15
Lunch and Learn
Moderator: Polina Ilieva, Board Member, Medical Heritage Library, Inc.; AUL for Archives and Special Collections, University Archivist, UC San Francisco

2.30pm – 3.30pm
Presentations

Moderator: Beth Lander, Secretary/Treasurer, Medical Heritage Library, Inc.; Managing Director, Philadelphia Area Consortium of Special Collections Libraries (PACSCL)

3:30-3:45
Break

3.45pm – 4.45pm
Presentations

Moderator: Melissa Grafe, Board Member, Medical Heritage Library, Inc.; Ph.D, Head of the Medical Historical Library, John R. Bumstead Librarian for Medical Historical, Harvey Cushing/John Hay Whitney Medical Library, Yale University

4:45pm-5:00pm


Closing

  • Closing: Robin Naughton, Vice-President, Medical Heritage Library, Inc.; Assistant Professor, Web and Digital Services Librarian, Queens College, CUNY 

Abstracts and Speaker Bios

Keynote Digitized Disability Histories

Speaker Jaipreet Virdi, Assistant Professor for the Department of History at the University of Delaware

Abstract Digital collaboratives and open-access collections present immense opportunities for historical methodologies and public engagement. Such curated collections can also reveal the cultural contingencies and politics entailed in how medical histories are preserved—what materials and whose stories are prioritized or left behind. As a scholar working at the intersection of medicine and disability, finding sources on disability within medical collections also requires addressing how disability is curated and defined within the database. To what extent is disability separate from medicine and where do we find stories of disabled people without implementing a medicalized gaze? Additionally, working with digitized disability histories forces the need to address access—not only in terms of accessing collections, but also in acknowledging who is able to access via digital interface, and what kinds of accessibility requirements are in place. 

Bio Doctor Virdi is a historian whose research focuses on the ways medicine and technology impact the lived experiences of disabled people. Her first book, Hearing Happiness: Deafness Cures in History (University of Chicago Press, 2020) raises pivotal questions about deafness in American society and the endless quest for a cure. She has published articles on diagnostic technologies, audiometry, hearing aids, and the medicalization of deafness and has published essays in The Atlantic and the New Internationalist.

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Title Searching for female perfection in the MHL collections

Speaker Hélène Cazes, Ph.D., University of Victoria, British Columbia

Abstract The research project Perfecta (The Perfection of the Female Body: anatomical discourses and defenses of women, 16th-18th c., SSHRC) explores the shift in defining the female body that was launched by the “sensible anatomy” of the early 16th century in Italy (Berengario da Carpi). Whereas the traditional medical texts considered the male body an exclusive model for the “perfection” of the human body, the emphasis on observation through dissection and the philological humanist movement propelled the female sexual anatomy as an emblematic topic for renewing the medical and cultural conceptions about sex, gender, and procreation. Beyond the (alleged) first anatomical findings of Estienne (1545), Colombo (1559), and Fallopio (1561), the female organs observed and situated in this new context contributed to a general reassessment of the hierarchy of sexes.

The scope of the MHL collections and their search tools allowed the reading of this historical shift in medical theories beyond a linear narrative of “great discoveries”. Consulting the collections as a treasure comprising of – along with well-known titles – obscure pamphlets, compilations, controversies, and out-of-the-discipline writings etc., we identified new sources and questions for a history of gynecology. First, we measured the resistance that cultural practices oppose to this past medical research: one example is the elusive membranous seal of virginity, called the “Hymen”, whose existence was disproved quite early in the 16th c., but which has been described, commented on and “repaired” until now. Second, we heard the conversation of the reception, discussion and transmission of new ideas in secondary collections (compilations, controversies, errors, recipes, textbooks, proverbs) that are usually overlooked in a linear telling of scientific progress. Thus, we appraised the erratic polyphony of past medical investigations: chronology is deceptive in the positivist tellings of knowledge advancement. The Renaissance perfection of the body female has coexisted with enduring mentions of its imperfections.

Bio Professor at the University of Victoria (Canada) since 2001, Hélène Cazes has published collections of essays and numerous papers on history of medicine, editorial mediations, learned networks, and bibliography. She is the director of the Open Journal Topiques, Études Satoriennes and an Associate Editor of Renaissance and Reformation/Renaissance et Réforme.

Her current research project Perfecta, La Perfection du corps féminin: discours anatomiques et défense des femmes, 16-18 explores Early Modern connections between feminism (or misogyny) and anatomy.

Her latest publication is the edition and annotation, in collaboration with Frédéric Charbonneau, of : Alphonse Leroy, Recherches sur les habillemens des femmes et des enfans, (Paris, Hermann, 2019 [1772])

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Title ‘A doctor’s advice and prescription is now worth more than any soothing syrup’: Writing ‘Scientific Motherhood’ in the Early Twentieth Century

Speaker Amber Hinde, Ph.D. (candidate), University of Glasgow, Scotland

Abstract The early twentieth century was a transformative period for motherhood in Britain. Contrary to traditional sources of knowledge, mothers were increasingly turning to doctor-authored advice literature for child-rearing information. A significant collection of this advice literature can be accessed via the Medical Heritage Library. In this paper I examine how authors of motherhood manuals used language to construct the ideology of ‘scientific motherhood’ (Apple, 1995), which emphasised the need for mothers to be instructed by experts. Whilst motherhood manuals have been approached by some social historians, they have thus far been neglected by linguists. In her definition of ‘scientific motherhood’, Apple notes its role in ‘prescribing women’s relationship to medical expertise’ (1995), yet how this was textually constructed remains unexplored. This is problematic given that ideologies are ‘built up and transmitted through texts, and it is in texts that their nature is revealed’ (Hunston and Thompson, 2000). In light of this, I adopt a discourse analytic approach to explore the writer-reader relationship in ten motherhood manuals held by the Medical Heritage Library. This approach enables me to not only identify linguistic features in the texts, but also to consider their wider social significance in relation to ideology and genre. My conclusions demonstrate that doctors made rhetorical choices to engineer a writer-reader relationship which worked to advance the ideology of scientific motherhood, attaching credibility to both themselves and the wider medical profession. Linguistic features such as stance markers, directives, and questions are present in the texts, and these were used rhetorically to foster a writer identity and engage with the reader, persuading them to accept the advice presented. This paper demonstrates the value of linguistic analysis in considering the social impact of historical medical texts, contributing a novel perspective to the field of linguistics and complementing the work of social historians.

Bio Amber Hinde is a PhD student in English Language & Linguistics at the University of Glasgow, Scotland.  Her research interests centre on language use in medical and health contexts, particularly the rhetorical nature of texts in these areas. Amber’s current research, funded by the Carnegie Trust for the Universities of Scotland, examines the rhetoric of two health gurus in late nineteenth and early twentieth century Britain.  Her previous research has included analysis of metaphors used by UK cancer charities, and persuasion in early twentieth century motherhood manuals.

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Title Visualizing Medical Heritage Collections at Scale

Speaker Catherine DeRose, Program Manager for the Digital Humanities Lab, Yale University, and Peter Leonard, Director of the Digital Humanities Lab at Yale University

Abstract The millions of open access images in the Medical Heritage Library (MHL) represent a fascinating curation challenge for librarians and researchers alike. Thanks to a decade of digitization efforts, more primary materials are available than ever before. The question becomes, how can we provide users with entry points into such massive collections that aren’t dependent solely on traditional, human-added descriptions? In addition to empirical metadata—such as the title of a book and image captions located physically near illustrations—other, more experimental techniques hold promise for the discovery, curation, and annotation of images as scale.

Yale’s open-source PixPlot [http://github.com/YaleDHLab/pix-plot] tool highlights one possible technique for providing users with a dynamic overview of large visual collections. PixPlot first uses a convolutional neural network to featurize tens of thousands of images into a high-dimensional space, and then applies an advanced dimensionality reduction algorithm to display those images in a web browser such that visually similar images are clustered near one another. For example, illustrations featuring botanical prints will appear in one section of the visualization, whereas photographs of the human hand will appear in another section. These algorithmically generated clusters provide quick, high-level insights of visual collections at scale. For deeper dives, users can zoom in and inspect these semantic clusters, curate their own subgroupings, filter views according to available metadata, click on an image to return to its source catalog page, and download subsets of images–along with their accompanying metadata—for use in research, teaching, and cataloging. Using a representative sample of images from across the MHL, we will demonstrate how PixPlot works from both a creator and end user point-of-view, walking through the steps from dataset ingest to curation, selection, and export.

Bios Catherine DeRose is the Program Manager for the Digital Humanities Lab at Yale University, where she consults on digital humanities projects, teaches workshops on data analysis and visualization, and directs the Digital Humanities Teaching Fellows program. She received her PhD in English from the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

Peter Leonard is the Director of the Digital Humanities Lab at Yale University. He received his BA in art history from the University of Chicago and his PhD in Scandinavian literature from the University of Washington. Before coming to Yale in 2013 as the first Librarian for Digital Humanities Research, he served as a postdoctoral researcher in text-mining at UCLA, supported by a Google Digital Humanities Research Award.

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Title Rarity factor: Unveiling unique materials from the National Library of Medicine

Speaker Krista Stracka, Rare Book Cataloger for the Rare Books and Early Manuscripts Section in the History of Medicine Division, National Library of Medicine

Abstract In 2010, the National Library of Medicine (NLM) joined four other libraries to partner with the Medical Heritage Library (MHL). As many uniquely held medical books and pamphlets were scanned and contributed to MHL from NLM’s Medicine in the Americas project, the question soon arose about how to efficiently surface other scarce materials that fall outside of the project’s scope. This presentation will discuss NLM’s collaborative efforts with several union catalog projects over the last decade to identify and increase accessibility to books printed in the West before 1801 with few surviving copies in the world. Pulling from collections identified through these collaborations, this presentation will also discuss likely reasons for their low survival rate and their value to historians of medicine and beyond.

Bio Krista Stracka is a Rare Book Cataloger for the National Library of Medicine’s History of Medicine Division. In addition to cataloging, her responsibilities include work on a range of digitization projects. Krista holds an MLIS from San José State University and a BA in English from Millersville University of Pennsylvania.

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Title Smoke on Screens: Audiovisual Evidence of the Tobacco Industry’s Harms to Public Health

Speaker Kate Tasker, Industry Documents Library Archivist, University of California, San Francisco and Rachel Taketa, Tobacco Projects Assistant, University of California, San Francisco

Abstract The Medical Heritage Library includes more than 3,000 audio and video recordings of tobacco industry commercials, internal focus groups, corporate meetings, and government hearings. These recordings were obtained from tobacco companies including Philip Morris, RJ Reynolds, and Juul, and they offer significant insight into decades of corporate communication strategies to deny the health risks of smoking and to promote tobacco products as cool, pleasurable, empowering to women, and part of a long-standing American tradition. The collections are maintained by the Industry Documents Library at the University of California, San Francisco, an online archive of over 15 million internal corporate documents which shed light on how industries influence public health.

Join UCSF Industry Documents Library staff for an introduction to the tobacco industry recordings in the Medical Heritage Library, and watch iconic footage of infamous cigarette commercials, public relations campaigns, and the historic government hearings which exposed industry fraud and helped bring about a $246 billion legal settlement and major tobacco control legislation. Session participants will learn how these audiovisual resources are being preserved, how to search and view the recordings, and how the collections can be used to learn about corporate strategies which influence smoking rates and lead to cancer, lung, and cardiovascular disease.

Bio Kate Tasker is the Industry Documents Library Archivist at the University of California, San Francisco, where she leads a team to manage a digital library of 15 million documents created by industries which influence public health. Kate works to provide permanent access to these collections for the benefit of researchers, policymakers, advocates, media, and the general public. She’s a member of the Academy of Certified Archivists and holds a Master of Library and Information Science from San Jose State University.

Rachel Taketa is the Industry Documents Library Specialist at the University of California, San Francisco.  Rachel is a member of the Society of California Archivists and holds a Master of Library and Information Science from San Jose State University.

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Title Drugs and Digitization: Investigating Opiate Addiction in the U.S. Civil War Era with the Medical Heritage Library

Speaker Jonathan Jones, Ph.D., Civil War Era Postdoctoral Scholar, George and Ann Richards Civil War Era Center, Pennsylvania State University

Abstract The Civil War triggered a massive epidemic of opiate addiction—America’s original opioid crisis. Thousands of sick and injured veterans struggled with drug addiction in the war’s wake. “Opium slavery,” as addiction was often described, ruined veterans’ health and manhood, alarmed government officials and doctors, and even rattled the foundations of 19th-century American medicine.

This paper investigates Civil War America’s opiate addiction crisis, illuminating the causes and costs of addiction for veterans and the broader consequences of the phenomenon for 19th-century American medicine. Along the way, this paper also highlights the methodological process and benefits of using full-text 19th-century medical journals to investigate medical phenomena like opiate addiction. This paper is derived from Jones’s dissertation manuscript on opiate addiction in the Civil War era—a project made possible by the Medical Heritage Library’s digitization efforts.

For decades, historians suspected that Civil War veterans suffered from opiate addiction. Yet before now, scholars lacked ready access to full-text Civil War-era medical journals. Identifying cases of addicted veterans in analog sources was akin to searching for needles in a haystack, and, consequently, the postwar addiction crisis has never previously been investigated closely, despite its scale, historical significance, and relevance to today’s opioid crisis. The MHL’s digitization efforts have resolved methodological and evidentiary hurdles, enabling this research, which represents the first major study of the Civil War-era opiate addiction crisis. Nineteenth-century American medical journals like the American Journal of Insanity and the Buffalo Medical and Surgical Journal, both digitized by the MHL, represent a key evidentiary base for this study. This project has been cited by Emily R. Novak Gustainis as an example of projects benefiting from MHL’s digitization efforts, and some early findings were previously featured on the MHL’s website.

Bio Jonathan S. Jones is the inaugural Postdoctoral Scholar in Civil War History at Penn State’s George and Ann Richards Civil War Era Center in 2020-21, where he is currently preparing a book manuscript on opiate addiction in the Civil War era for publication. The project is derived from his dissertation on the same topic, defended at Binghamton University in June 2020. Jonathan’s recent publications include an article in The Journal of the Civil War Era’s June 2020 issue titled “Opium Slavery: Civil War Veterans and Opiate Addiction.” After Penn State, Jonathan will be joining the Department of History at Virginia Military Institute as an Assistant Professor of Civil War history starting in August 2021. You can contact Jonathan on Twitter at @_jonathansjones or at jonathansjones.net

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Title Medicine in the Monthly Review: A Large-Scale Analysis of Medical Texts and Discourses

Speaker Whitney Arnold, Ph.D., Adjunct Assistant Professor of Comparative Literature and Director of the Undergraduate Research Center for the Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences at the University of California (UCLA)

Abstract This paper employs digital tools to uncover popular views of medicine and health in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Britain and its environs. Historians of medicine have long noted the importance of recovering non-specialist views of medicine and health, and this paper examines popular print portrayals of medical knowledge through the British periodical the Monthly Review. Published monthly from 1749 to 1844, the Monthly was greatly influential in its time, and, due to its aim of reviewing every published text, provides valuable records of and contemporary discussions about thousands of texts currently outside the scope of scholarly analysis.

However, the Monthly has received limited scholarly attention, likely due in part to the unwieldy size of its corpus, which spans 96 years and 246 volumes, each composed of 3 to 6 monthly issues (totaling over 140,000 pages). By digitally analyzing the entire Monthly Review corpus through the machine learning technique of statistical topic modeling, this paper reveals the presentation and prevalence of various medical discourses in the popular periodical, as well as how these discourses varied over the years. The analysis sheds light on the medical topics and texts that featured prominently in the late eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century British publishing sphere. The digitized Monthly Review issues in the Medical Heritage Library were referenced for the project, while the text-only dataset was received from HathiTrust. The Medical Heritage Library collections proved especially helpful in uncovering the original eighteenth- and nineteenth-century texts reviewed in the Monthly’s pages.

Bio Whitney Arnold is Adjunct Assistant Professor of Comparative Literature and Director of the Undergraduate Research Center for the Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). Her research and publications focus on self-narratives and autobiographical texts in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Britain and France, as well as literary history and theories of authorship. Her current project is an analysis of narratives of health and medicine in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century autobiographical texts.

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Title Diet, Weight, and the Authority of Books: Santorio’s Medical Method

Speaker Caterina Agostini, Ph.D. (candidate), Rutgers University

Abstract The main source for this study is Santorio Santorio’s book Ars de statica medicina (The Discipline of Weight-Related Medicine, 1614) where he reported observations on diet, weight, and health. Santorio considered it so important to check diet and weight, that he weighed himself regularly for thirty years. He also collected ten thousand weight records of patients and friends, Galileo included, and was a professor of theoretical medicine at the University of Padua (1611-1624). In order to have exact measurements at any time, Santorio used a weighing chair, as seen in my selected illustrations. He recorded weights and clinical variables such as the time of the day, the amount and type of food and drinks, and the patient’s exercise or rest.

I will encourage a wider discussion through a textual and visual approach, and my digital humanities project which I hope to present during my lightning talk. While Santorio’s book preserves textual instructions for a range of recommended foods, based on a person’s age, gender, and physical activity, the book illustrations published over one hundred and fifty years show an evolving perspective of the patients and what they choose to have on the table: “(t)hat quantity of food to everyone is most healthful, which without any uneasiness can be perfectly digested: and that it is perfectly digested, may be known by the sum of the evacuations answering the quantities taken in; which will appear by weighing” (III, 38). My project compares passages to classical sources, integrates illustrations from many editions and reprints (for a total of fourteen texts, editions and translations of Santorio’s text, found in the Medical Heritage Library), and examines the meaning of modern-day replicas of the weighing chair as a scientific instrument.

Bio Caterina Agostini is a Ph.D. candidate at Rutgers University Department of Italian and a Eugene Garfield fellow at the American Philosophical Society’s Library & Museum. 

She has developed and published digital projects and articles on early modern science and medicine as a fellow at the Electronic Textual Cultures Lab at the University of Victoria and at the Advanced Institute on Text Analysis at Northeastern University. Caterina is currently a digital humanities research specialist at Rutgers Digital Humanities Initiative and Lab. 

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Title A Properly Made Mask: Historical Lessons from Popular Culture and Medical Discourse during the 1918 Flu Epidemic

Speaker E. Thomas Ewing, Ariel Ludwig, Jessica Brabble

Abstract During the influenza epidemic that ravaged the United States in the fall and winter of 1918 and 1919, cities across the country advised or required masks. Soon, discussions of masks took center stage across American media. Newspapers were filled with articles explaining how to make, wear, and purchase masks. From their inception, these discussions were focused on gender, and women in particular: how were women adjusting to the new normal? What was the public’s perception of women wearing masks?

This paper will focus on how masks became gendered and how the media responded during the 1918-1919 flu epidemic. Specifically, it will explore how masks were used as a necessity by working women and as a form of expression, and will discuss the various ways in which newspapers and magazines responded to these forms of mask wearing.

This paper will draw upon the Medical Heritage Library’s collections to provide information about perceptions of the influenza epidemic. The state medical journals provide particular insights into the medical community’s understanding of mask use and effectiveness during the epidemic. Editorials representing the view of the medical societies, reports from individual doctors, and research on infection patterns provide evidence of the most important question during the 1918 epidemic which resonates during Covid in 2020: were masks effective at preventing the spread of disease?The title of this presentation comes from a November 1918 Journal of the Indiana State Medical Association editorial, which endorsed the use of masks in medical facilities to prevent droplet infection, yet also acknowledged “we have utterly failed in the present crisis” to contain the epidemic. As we look back on the 1918 epidemic from the perspective of 2020, we can find historical lessons in understanding how medical experts and the American public responded to advice regarding “a properly made mask.”

Bio Ariel Ludwig recently received her doctoral degree in Science and Technology in Society (STS), Jessica Brabble is a second-year graduate student in history, and E. Thomas Ewing is a professor of history, all at Virginia Tech. More information about their flu mask research is here: https://sites.google.com/vt.edu/flumasks/home.

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Roots of Racism in Health and Medicine

What are the roots of racism in health and medicine?  The Medical Heritage Library has begun the work of surfacing historical texts in our collection that show racism, health disparities, experimentation, and the other ways that medicine and race intertwine over time.

Early medical texts, particularly in the eighteenth through early twentieth centuries, increasingly focused on “differences” among humans or on diseases that seemed to specifically target certain races. Texts written by many Black authors, such as W.E.B. DuBois and his colleagues, worked to contextualize health issues in larger society, complicating racial stereotypes. Mid to late twentieth century texts, represented most often by government documents in our collection, attempted to give voice the deep problems surrounding race, medicine, and health.  Themes of racial differences and disparities continue to haunt medicine and healthcare access today, and we hope we can help shed some light on this longer and darker history through these challenging primary sources. 

Please be aware that some of these texts can be offensive in today’s context, using language, depicting images, and promoting ideas that are extremely problematic.

TitleAuthorPublisherDate
A study of black medical students at three medical schoolsFranklin, Reginald Keith1974
The black man : the comparative anatomy and psychology of the African NegroBurmeister, Hermann, 1807-1892William C. Bryant & Co.1853
On the Negro's place in natureHunt, James, 1833-1869Published for the Anthropological Society, by Trübner1863
Ethnology of the negro or prognathous race : a lecture delivered Nov. 30, 1857, before the N. O. Academy of SciencesCartwright, Samuel A. (Samuel Adolphus), 1793-18631857
Prodromus towards a philosophical inquiry into the intellectual powers of the negroBinns, Edward, -1851John Churchill1844
A practical view of the present state of slavery in the West Indies : or, An examination of Mr. Stephen's "Slavery of the British West India Colonies:"Barclay, AlexanderPublished by Smith, Elder & Co.1826
On the pigment of the Negro's skin and hairAbel, John Jacob, 1857-1938; Davis, Walter SD. Appleton and Company1896
Early syphilis in the NegroAtkinson, I. Edmondson (Isaac Edmondson), 1846-19061877
The problem of the races in AfricaColenso, Harriette Emily, 1847-1932; Simon, Sir John, 1816-1904Oriental University Institute1897
Das Hirn des Negers mit dem des Europäers und Orang-Outangs verglichenTiedemann, Friedrich, 1781-1861K. Winter1837
Instincts of racesNott, Josiah Clark, 1804-1873L. Graham1866
The Nachash origin of the black and mixed racesThompson, Charles Blancher, 1814-1895G. Knapp & Co., printers and binders1860
Des moyens de conserver la sante? des blancs et des ne?gres, aux Antilles ou climats chauds et humides de l'Ame?riqueBertin, docteurChez Me?quignon l'ai?ne?1786
A study in the epidemiology of tuberculosis with especial reference to tuberculosis of the tropics and of the negro raceBushnell, George E. (George Ensigh), 1853-1924William Wood and Co.c1920 (1922 printing)
Observations on the skeleton of a HottentotWyman, Jeffries, 1814-18741863
Observations and researches on albinism in the negro raceJones, Joseph, (1833-1896)Collins, printer1869
The anular [i.e. annular] lesions of early syphilis in the negroFox, Howard, 1873-1947Wilhelm Braumüller1912
Hayti, or, The Black republicSt. John, Spenser, Sir, 1826-1910.Smith, Elder1884
Characteristic labor scenes among the yellow, black and red racesEngelmann, George J. (George Julius), 1847-19031882
Dr. H.A. Ramsay's letter to Dr. James Bryan, on the Southern negro, etcRamsay, H. A; Bryan, James, 1810-1881A. Hughes & Co., printers1853
Contributions a la pathologie de la race nègreChassaniol1865
The classification of mankind, by the hair and wool of their heads : with an answer to Dr. Prichard's assertion, that "the covering of the head of the Negro is hair, properly so termed, and not wool" : read before the American Ethnological Society, November 3, 1849Browne, Peter A. (Peter Arrell), 1782-1860; Prichard, James Cowles, 1786-1848Hart1850
Medical advice to the inhabitants of warm climates, on the domestic treatment of all the diseases incidental therein : with a few useful hints to new settlers, for the preservation of health, and the prevention of sicknessThomas, Robert, 1753-1835Printed and sold by John Wells1794
An essay on the more common West-India diseases; and the remedies which that country itself produces : To which are added, some hints on the management, &c. of negroesGrainger, James, 1721?-1766T. Becket and P. A. De Hondt1764
Race mixture : studies in intermarriage and miscegenationReuter, Edward Byron, 1880-1946.McGraw-Hill1931
Physical differences between white and colored childrenHrdlic?ka, Ales?, 1869-1943,Judd & Detweiler1898
Reports of the trustees, superintendent and resident physician, and other officers of the lunatic asylum, of the state of Georgia, from October 1st, 1887, to 1st October, 1888Georgia State Lunatic AsylumPrinted by Union & Recorder-Barnes & Moore1888
Traité de la couleur de la peau humaine en général; de celle des negres en particulier, et de la métamorphose d'une de ces couleurs en l'autre, soit de naissance, soit accidentellementLe Cat, Claude-Nicolas, 1700-17681765
Dissertatio secunda de sede et caussa coloris Aethiopum et caeterorum hominum.Albinus, Bernhard Siegfried, 1697-1770Theodore Haak1737
Dietary studies with reference to the food of the Negro in Alabama in 1895 and 1896Atwater, W. O. (Wilbur Olin), 1844-1907Government Printing Office1897
A treatise on the diseases of negroes, as they occur in the island of Jamaica : with observations on the country remediesThomson, James, fl. 1814-1820Printed by Alex. Aikman, jun. ...1820
The health and physique of the Negro American : report of a social study made under the direction of Atlanta University : together with the Proceedings of the Eleventh Conference for the Study of the Negro Problems, held at Atlanta university, on May the 29th, 1906Du Bois, W. E. B. (William Edward Burghardt), 1868-1963Atlanta University Press1906
Observations sur les maladies des negres : leurs causes, leurs traitemens et les moyens de les prévenirDazille, Jean-Barthélémi, -1812Chez Didot le jeune1776
Half a man : the status of the Negro in New YorkOvington, Mary White, 1865-1951Longmans, Green, and Co.1911
Essai de pathologie ethnique : de l'influence de la race sur la fréquence, la forme et la gravité des maladiesBoudin, J. Ch. M. (Jean Christian Marc François Joseph), 1806-18671862
Disease and raceJadrooSwan Sonnenschein1894
Human faculty as determined by race : addressBoas, Franz, 1858-1942The Salem Press1894
On some of the apparent peculiarities of parturition in the Negro race, with remarks on race pelves in generalJohnson, Joseph Taber, 1846-1921William Wood & Co.1875
Thoughts on the original unity of the human raceCaldwell, Charles, 1772-1853E. Bliss1830
The doctrine of the unity of the human race examined on the principles of scienceBachman, John, 1790-1874C. Canning1850
The vital equation of the colored race and its future in the United StatesCorson, Eugene Rollin, 1855-Comstock Publishing Co.1893
Observations on the climate in different parts of America : compared with the climate in corresponding parts of the other continent : to which are added, remarks on the different complexions of the human race ; with some account of the aborigines of America : being an introductory discourse to the History of North-CarolinaWilliamson, Hugh, 1735-1819Printed and sold by T. & J. Swords, no. 160 Pearl-Street1811
In the heart of the New South : letter from Birmingham, Ala.Wendt, Edmund Charles, 1857-1903Trow's Printing and Bookbinding Co.1890
Down in Dixie : a second Birmingham, Ala., letterWendt, Edmund Charles, 1857-1903Trow's Printing and Bookbinding Co.1890
The treatment practices of Black physiciansKoba Associates; United States. Office of Health Resources OpportunityHRA1979
What experience has taught me ; an autobiography of Thomas William Burton ..Burton, Thomas William, b. 1860Press of Jennings and Graham1910
Crossing Ovah' : a phenomenological examination of healing in African Americans of the Southeastern United StatesAnderson, LaLisa Alita2001
Navy Medicine Highlights First African Americans In The Navy Medical DepartmentU.S. Navy. Bureau of Medicine and Surgery2013
Final national demographic report on African American elderlyUnited States. Health Care Financing Administration; Helix Group, IncThe Helix Group, Inc.2000
Tobacco Advertising: African Americans
On the treatment of vesico-vaginal fistulaSims, J. Marion (James Marion), 1813-1883Blanchard & Lea1853

Digging Into Digital: The MHL

Together with LAMPHHS, we’re offering an online session all about the MHL!

Melissa Grafe, our immediate past president from the Historical Medical Library of Yale Medical School, Jessica Murphy from the Center for the History of Medicine at the Francis A Countway Library of Medicine, and Hanna Clutterbuck-Cook from the MHL and the Center will be guiding the session.

When: Friday, July 31th at 1 p.m. EST

What: We’ll spend about 30-45 minutes on an introduction to the MHL and strategies for diving into the MHL corpus, showing how to surface materials related to epidemics and diseases as an example (a hot topic for the upcoming fall semester!), and discussing other ways the MHL is promoting discovery of various parts of the collection.

In this Digging Into Digital session, we’ll dive into the rich and freely open collections digitized by the Medical Heritage Library, a non-profit collaborative digitization and discovery organization committed to providing open access resources in the history of healthcare and the health sciences. This session is tailored for library, archive, and museum professionals who provide history of medicine and health research help and classroom teaching. 

Please quickly register your email here:  https://forms.gle/YhBeBLpnibRJS2KX9

The session is open to people outside of LAMPHHS, so if you have colleagues who want to join in, they are welcome to do so.   We will use the email you share in registration to send you the Zoom link the day before the session. 

Introducing Our Summer 2020 Fellow: Kim Adams

Photograph of Kim Adams with her arms in the air in triumph in front of a homegrown sunflower
Kim celebrating a sunflower she grew in her backyard last year.  

For a few years running, there has been minor scandal about Joe Biden’s wife.  Jill Biden has a doctorate in education from the University of Delaware, and requests that she be addressed under her formal title: Dr. Biden.  While the Obama White House listed her as “Dr. Jill Biden” on their official website, several newspapers, including the New York Times, refused to honor her wish, referring to her as “Mrs. Biden.” The Washington Post remarked that it reserves the title of Dr. for medical professionals, “if you can’t heal the sick, we don’t call you doctor.” While there is ample room for sexism in refusing Dr. Biden her proper title, there is also a long history of intellectual warfare between the arts and the sciences. 

As the child of two physicians, I spent a lot of time defending my choice not to go to medical school, and instead pursue a PhD. When I earned my doctorate from the Department of English at NYU in the spring of 2019, I got a lot of well-meaning jokes about which Dr. Adams was the “real” doctor. It turns out the punchline might require a bit of medical history. At the Society for Literature, Science, and the Arts conference last fall, a colleague told me that in the eighteenth century, it was reversed, “We were the real doctors, and they were not.”  

I like to imagine myself as someone who, like C.P. Snow, has a foot in each of these “two cultures”: standing with the “real” doctors of the past and the present.  Snow argued in 1959 that the intellectual life of Western culture was increasingly being split into two groups, the humanists and the scientists, who were utterly failing to communicate with each other: “one found Greenwich Village talking precisely the same language as Chelsea, and both having about as much communication with M.I.T. as though the scientists spoke nothing but Tibetan.” He observed this division not through an anthropological study of academic communities, but through the idiosyncrasies of personal experience: “plenty of days when I have spent the working hours with scientists and then gone off at night with some literary colleagues.” I, on the other hand, spend my working hours researching the Harlem Renaissance, and my evenings drinking with scientists (or at least I did before our current pandemic). Snow is a double agent: a scientist by day and a writer by night. I am another, newer kind of operative: a medical humanist.  

I have crafted a scholarly identity that combines literature and medicine with the goal of speaking a language understood on both sides of the cultural divide.  My dissertation, The Body Electric, examines the role of medical technology in American literature, from mesmerism to electroconvulsive therapy, Walt Whitman to Ralph Ellison.  Sharing this research with a wider audience, I recently published a piece on the medical history of vibrators. In it, I argue that vibrators were asexual medical quackery from the 1890s to the 1970s when feminists repurposed them for masturbatory liberation. Last spring, I worked with my peers to organize a conference on the cultural history of pharmacology, where we heard papers about anesthesia in nineteenth-century American novels, the opium trade in colonial Korea, and crisis nursing at twentieth-century rock concerts.  The conference confirmed my suspicion that the amazing material history of medicine deserves a wider audience. 

The Medical Heritage Library brings an extraordinary range of material from the history and culture of medical science to the broader reading public.  Scores of freely available, digital resources in the MHL collections, from medieval accounts of plague and quarantine, to early twentieth century studies of eugenics and “race suicide,” speak directly to our contemporary moment, and have a valuable role to play in shaping public discourse.  As the Summer Outreach Fellow, I look forward to extending the MHL’s mission to share these resources with humanists and scientists alike, building a common language among the multiple, vibrant, cultures of the broader reading public

From Our Partners: “They Were Really Us”: The UCSF Community’s Early Response to AIDS — A New Exhibition on Calisphere

~This post courtesy Polina Ilieva, Head, Archives and Special Collections, UCSF Libraries.

When HIV/AIDS first seized the nation’s attention in the early 1980s, it was a disease with no name, known cause, treatment, or cure. Beginning as a medical mystery, it turned into one of the most divisive social and political issues of the 20th century. The University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) was at the forefront of medical institutions trying to understand the disease and effectively treat early AIDS patients.

Drawing on materials from the AIDS History Project collections preserved in UCSF’s Archives and Special Collections, the UCSF Library presents “They Were Really Us”: The UCSF Community’s Early Response to AIDS, a new digital exhibition on Calisphere that highlights the ways UCSF clinicians and staff addressed HIV/AIDS from its outbreak in the 1980s to the foundation of the AIDS Research Institute in 1996. 

From medical professionals defining the disease and developing a model of care, to activists calling for treatments and public education, this exhibition amplifies the resilience of a community not only responding to its local needs, but also breaking ground on a larger scale with efforts that continue to impact HIV/AIDS care and research today. 

This exhibition, including the digitization of materials used in this exhibition, has been made possible in part by a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities (PW-253755-17) “The San Francisco Bay Area’s Response to the AIDS Epidemic: Digitizing, Reuniting, and Providing Universal Access to Historical AIDS Records,” awarded to the UCSF Library in 2017-2020.

About UCSF Archives and Special Collections

UCSF Archives and Special Collections identifies, collects, preserves, and maintains rare and unique materials to support research and teaching of the health sciences and medical humanities and to preserve UCSF institutional memory. The Archives serve as the official repository for the preservation of selected records, print and born-digital materials, and realia generated by or about the UCSF, including all four schools, the Graduate Division, and the UCSF Medical Center.

The Special Collections encompasses a Rare Book Collection that includes incunabula, early printed works, and modern secondary works. The East Asian Collection is especially strong in works related to the history of Western medicine in Japan. The Japanese Woodblock Print Collection consists of 400 prints and 100 scrolls, dating from 16th to the 20th century. The Special Collections also contains papers of health care providers and researchers from San Francisco and California; historical records of UCSF hospitals; administrative records of regional health institutions; photographs and slides; motion picture films and videotapes; and oral histories focusing on development of biotechnology; the practice and science of medicine; healthcare delivery, economics, and administration; tobacco control; anesthesiology;  homeopathy and alternative medicine; obstetrics and gynecology; high altitude physiology; occupational medicine; HIV/AIDS and global health.

About Calisphere

Calisphere provides free access to California’s remarkable digital collections, which include unique and historically important artifacts from the University of California and other educational and cultural heritage institutions across the state. Calisphere provides digital access to over one million photographs, documents, letters, artwork, diaries, oral histories, films, advertisements, musical recordings, and more.

Calisphere Exhibitions are curated sets of items with scholarly interpretation that contribute to historical understanding. Exhibitions tell a story by adding context to selected digital primary sources in Calisphere, thereby bringing the digital content to life. Calisphere Exhibitions are curated by contributing institutions and undergo editorial review. We are currently refining these processes, which are outlined in the Contributor Help Center. Please contact us if you’re interested in learning more about Calisphere Exhibitions.

Final words from our outgoing president, Melissa Grafe, Ph.D

I wanted to thank all our MHL users for the support you’ve shown us over the past 11 years.  We started in 2009 in an effort to bring a consortial model to digitization of medical heritage materials across different types of institutions.  I began co-chairing the MHL in 2015 after the death of our leader, Kathryn Hammond Baker, who was Deputy Director of the Center for the History of Medicine at the Countway Library at Harvard University.  Kathryn successfully guided the MHL in the early years, and with the governance committee, established our website, wrote several digitization grants, and generally set the path for our organization.  Being relatively new to the organization and working full-time as Head of the Medical Historical Library at Yale University, I knew I needed help to fill Kathryn’s large shoes.

Working with Emily Novak Gustainis, current Deputy Director of the Center and MHL co-chair, we expanded the MHL’s footprint with our amazing partners.  The MHL now has over 320,000 items in our Internet Archive instance and over 4,000,000 images drawn from these collections residing in our Flickr account.  With the addition of the Wellcome Library and the Bibliothèque interuniversitaire de Santé (BIU Santé) as international governance members, the MHL includes fabulous collections from these illustrious institutions, accounting for over half of the MHL corpus.  Our international and national governance members, including the National Library of Medicine, UCSF Library, the New York Academy of Medicine, the College of Physicians of Philadelphia, the Augustus C. Long Health Sciences Library at Columbia University, the Cushing/Whitney Medical Library at Yale University (where I’m from), and the Francis A. Countway Library of Medicine at Harvard, sustain the MHL, contributing funding, time, effort, collections, and resources to keep our organization going.  We also appreciate all the content contributors that tag their collection in Internet Archive with the MHL tag.

In 2018, with particular help from Beth Lander, College Librarian at the College of Physicians, the MHL embarked on a journey to become a stand-alone, incorporated non-profit, which we achieved in 2019, ten years after our founding.  I became the first president of the MHL in 2018, with my term ending on June 30th, 2020.  The MHL started a fellowship program in 2018 to bring fresh voices to bear on every aspect of our work.  Our fellows have delved into our user base to better understand ways to reach our audiences, created curated primary source sets on vaccination and disability, and analyzed the infrastructure supporting our Advanced search.  We are happy to introduce Kim Adams as our fellow for this year, who will be helping us expand our outreach efforts and organize our first virtual symposium.

Please join me in welcoming our new President, Emily Novak Gustainis.  She is an incredible person and will lead the MHL in amazing directions moving forward.  We look forward to your continued support as our users, and encourage you to share stories on how you use the MHL in your research, teaching, learning, and world.  Email us at medicalheritage@gmail.com.

In Support of #BlackLivesMatter

The Medical Heritage Library grieves for the deaths of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and Ahmaud Arbery, all brutally murdered in recent weeks. Systemic racism is a public health issue; our historical collection does not represent black or brown voices well; instead, they are often excluded, muted, ignored, and buried in the records. 

The Medical Heritage Library is the creation of elite academic institutions and as such has its foundation in a long tradition of academic complicity with institutionalized racism. We choose to work towards the end of systemic racism in our work and community. We stand in solidarity with those protesting police brutality and the deadly effects of systemic racism.

It can be a challenge to find historical texts related to race within the context of health and medicine in the Medical Heritage Library, and that is why we invite our users to help us identify texts contributing to a greater historical understanding. Send your findings to medicalheritage@gmail.com and we will compile the recommendations and make them available through our website (www.medicalheritage.org). 

CSV test

creatordateidentifierURLtitle
Wu, Liande, 1879-1960. n 85801626,Dongbei fang yi chu. n 2012184430,China. National Quarantine Service1934-01-01T00:00:00Zhttps://archive.org/details/b29822749https://archive.org/details/b29822749Manchurian Plague Prevention Service memorial volume : 1912-1932
Dongbei fang yi chu. n 2012184430,Wu, Liande, 1879-1960. n 858016261930-01-01T00:00:00Zhttps://archive.org/details/b29752267_0002https://archive.org/details/b29752267_0002North Manchurian Plague Prevention Service Reports (1929-1930)
Dongbei fang yi chu,Wu, Liande, 1879-19601926-01-01T00:00:00Zhttps://archive.org/details/b29752097https://archive.org/details/b29752097North Manchurian Plague Prevention Service reports (1925-1926)
Dongbei fang yi chu,Wu, Liande, 1879-19601930-01-01T00:00:00Zhttps://archive.org/details/b29752267_0001https://archive.org/details/b29752267_0001North Manchurian Plague Prevention Service Reports (1929-1930)
North Manchurian Plague Prevention Service1913-01-01T00:00:00Zhttps://archive.org/details/reportofnorthman1911northttps://archive.org/details/reportofnorthman1911nortReport of the North Manchurian Plague Prevention Service
Wu, Liande, 1879-1960. n 85801626,Dongbei fang yi chu. n 20121844301922-01-01T00:00:00Zhttps://archive.org/details/b2975222xhttps://archive.org/details/b2975222xNorth Manchurian Plague Prevention Service reports (1918-1922)
Wu, Liande, 1879-1960. n 85801626,Dongbei fang yi chu. n 20121844301924-01-01T00:00:00Zhttps://archive.org/details/b29752280https://archive.org/details/b29752280North Manchurian Plague Prevention Service reports (1923-1924)
Wu, Liande, 1879-1960, editor1917-01-01T00:00:00Zhttps://archive.org/details/b29752085https://archive.org/details/b29752085North Manchurian Plague Prevention Service reports (1914-1917)
Dongbei fang yi chu. n 2012184430,Wu, Liande, 1879-1960. n 858016261928-01-01T00:00:00Zhttps://archive.org/details/b29752243https://archive.org/details/b29752243North Manchurian Plague Prevention Service Reports (1927-1928)
Wu, Liande, 1879-1960,Dongbei fang yi chu1914-01-01T00:00:00Zhttps://archive.org/details/b28082965https://archive.org/details/b28082965North Manchurian Plague Prevention Service reports (1911-1913)
Donald Grahn2017-04-09T00:00:00Zhttps://archive.org/details/scm-593113-c4i-april11derrickrobinsonofphttps://archive.org/details/scm-593113-c4i-april11derrickrobinsonofpC4I - April 11 Derrick Robinson of PACTS Intnl

Call for Papers!

~This post courtesy Beth Lander.

CALL FOR PAPERS

FHNN Virtual Conference

June 2020

Title:  Silences in the LAMS: Digital Surrogacy in the Time of Pandemic

Date:  October 12, 2020 (VIRTUAL)

Intro: The College of Physicians of Philadelphia, in conjunction with the CLIR-funded project For the Health of the New Nation (FHNN) through a partnership with the Philadelphia Area Consortium for Special Collections Libraries (PACSCL), invites proposals for a one-day, online conference on the use of digital primary sources.

In a time when the use of hard-copy primary sources has been all but eliminated, how are teachers, scholars, and other researchers using digital surrogates in their work? How has this digital format impacted the research process? What are the strengths and weaknesses of working solely with digital collections? How do (or don’t) digital surrogates manifest silences within archives?  This conference will explore these questions and more to examine the challenges and rewards of conducting or teaching history in a near virtual environment.

Session Formats

Presenting online creates new challenges, but it also offers new possibilities. While we suggest your proposal match one of the session formats below, we encourage presenters to use any digital presentation style that would engage and entice viewers.

Traditional Paper Presentation – 30-minute session of one fully prepared paper, with time for comments and discussion

Panel Discussion – 60-minute session consisting of three to five panelists discussing perspectives on a selected topic

Lightning Talks – 30-minute session of four to five 5-minute talks on a given topic

Proposal Evaluation:  The Program Committee invites proposals on the following topics, as they relate to digital archival collections: 

  • Archival silences 
  • Exclusions in the history of medical education 
  • Metadata and access 
  • Teaching with primary sources 
  • Loss of physicality 
  • Effective digital tools to mine content

    Presenters are encouraged, though not required, to use digitized materials from the CLIR Hidden Collections grant project, For the Health of the New Nation…, in their proposals.  

    Submitting a Proposal: Initial proposals require an abstract of up to 250 words as well as a preliminary title. If the abstract is accepted, full papers will be due this fall (see below for more details). 

    Submission form: https://forms.gle/i7pPgVLXMYLgtPHu7 

    Deadline for abstract submission:  July 1, 2020

    Date of acceptance notification:  July 15, 2020 

    RBM publication:  If your abstract is accepted, you may be asked to submit your full presentation for potential publication in RBM: A Journal of Rare Books, Manuscripts and Cultural Heritage, Spring 2021 issue.  Final selection for publication will be dependent on the number of submissions and input from the RBM editorial board. 

    Deadline for paper/presentation submission:  September 1, 2020

    RBM accepted papers due:  September 15, 2020

    Word limit for papers:  Papers must conform to the publication guidelines of RBM.  We suggest no more than 3500 words. 

    Review Committee members:

    Beth Lander, College Librarian/The Robert Austrian Chair, College of Physicians of Philadelphia
    Kelsey Duinkerken, Special Collections & Digital Services Librarian, Thomas Jefferson University
    Kelly O’Donnell, Ph.D., NEH Postdoctoral Fellow, Consortium for History of Science, Technology, and Medicine 

    Keynote Speaker:  Melissa Grafe, Ph.D.  John R. Bumstead Librarian for Medical History, Head of the Medical Historical Library 

    Contact names

    Beth Lander, College of Physicians of Philadelphia (blander@collegeofphysicians.org)
    Kelsey Duinkerken, Thomas Jefferson University (Kelsey.Duinkerken@jefferson.edu

    For the Health of the New Nation is supported by a Digitizing Hidden Special Collections and Archives grant from the Council on Library and Information Resources (CLIR). The grant program is made possible by funding from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.