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Book Review: ‘Operation Ouch! Medical Milestones and Crazy Cures’ | Clinical Curiosities
https://annerhanley.wordpress.com/2014/11/10/book-review-operation-ouch-medical-milestones-and-crazy-cures
Musings from a medical historian Anne Hanley. Book Review: ‘Operation Ouch! Medical Milestones and Crazy Cures’. Here is the link to my recent review of. Medical Milestones and Crazy Cures. Has certainly prompted me to think more carefully about how researchers can start conversations with children and how they can introduce children to the history of medicine in ways that are both engaging and informative. I hope you enjoy reading this review as much as I enjoyed writing it. Posted in Public Engagement.
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Teaching | Clinical Curiosities
https://annerhanley.wordpress.com/teaching
Musings from a medical historian Anne Hanley. Department of History and Philosophy of Science, Part II (BBS): History and Ethics of Medicine (2013-14). Faculty of History, Paper 11: British Economic and Social History Since 1880 (2013-14, 2014-15). Modern European History, 1750-1914 (2010, 2011). Darwinism, Nationalism and Eugenics (2010). Twentieth Century Europe (2010). Writing History (Methodological Skills, Sources and Approaches) (2009, 2010). The Middle Ages (2009, 2010). Leave a Reply Cancel reply.
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Down the rabbit hole | Clinical Curiosities
https://annerhanley.wordpress.com/2015/08/18/down-the-rabbit-hole
Musings from a medical historian Anne Hanley. Down the rabbit hole. So, in writing a blog post about the unexpected academic twists and turns over these past twelve months, I hope for it to be of use to those falling down the same post-PhD rabbit hole, and to demonstrate that things might not be so grim as they first appear. How did I end up in Leeds? But how to keep body and soul together in the interim? Applying for academic jobs. During my time as an Education Officer in PRHS. Which are designed to en...
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holmesmatthew9920 | Thinking Like A Mountain
https://holmesmatthew.wordpress.com/author/holmesmatthew9920
Thinking Like A Mountain. The Weird and Wonderful in the History of Science and the Environment. TALKS, PRIZES and PUBLICATIONS. Articles posted by holmesmatthew9920. A Good Read: A Scottish Plant Hunter in Nineteenth-Century Japan. September 5, 2016. September 5, 2016. The Society for the History of Natural History, or SHNH ( http:/ shnh.org.uk/. Yedo and Peking. A narrative of a journey to the capitals of Japan and China. London, John Murray, 1863). Yedo and Peking. A narrative of a journey to the ...
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Publications | Clinical Curiosities
https://annerhanley.wordpress.com/publications
Musings from a medical historian Anne Hanley. A list of my completed publications is maintained here. Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window). Share on Facebook (Opens in new window). Click to share on Google (Opens in new window). Leave a Reply Cancel reply. Enter your comment here. Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:. Address never made public). You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. ( Log Out. You are commenting using your Twitter account. ( Log Out. Leeds Cent...
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The curious case of Alice Beatty: medical provisions and the ethics of patient care | Clinical Curiosities
https://annerhanley.wordpress.com/2014/12/02/the-curious-case-of-alice-beatty
Musings from a medical historian Anne Hanley. The curious case of Alice Beatty: medical provisions and the ethics of patient care. In 1895, Joseph Bell of the Edinburgh Royal Infirmary published the fourth edition of his. Notes on Surgery for Nurses. In which he critically alluded to the case:. Beatty then brought a libel case against the London and Edinburgh publishers, as well as Bell himself. She was offered fifty guineas and costs, which she accepted. It is scandalous’, Cann argued, ‘that Miss Beatty...
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Research | Clinical Curiosities
https://annerhanley.wordpress.com/phd-summary
Musings from a medical historian Anne Hanley. History of Modern Medicine, Medical Education, and Medical Technologies; History of Science. British Social and Cultural History; History and Policy; Gender History. I am currently a Visiting Research Fellow at the University of Leeds with particular expertise in the history of modern medicine, medical education, health policy, and the history of science. Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window). Share on Facebook (Opens in new window). Citizen Science...
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