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Margaret Humphreys, Josiah Charles Trent Professor in the History of Medicine and Professor of Medicine

Margaret Humphreys
Contact Info:
Office Location:  206 Carr
Office Phone:  919 684 2285, 919 668 9000
Email Address: send me a message

Teaching (Spring 2012):

  • HISTORY 189B.01, PUBLIC HEALTH IN AMERICA Synopsis
    East Duke 204B, TuTh 10:05 AM-11:20 AM
  • MEDHUM 301B.16, RESEARCH IN MEDHUM Synopsis
    TBA, 12:00 AM-12:00 AM
  • MEDHUM 301B.16-S, RESEARCH IN MEDHUM Synopsis
    TBA, 12:00 AM-12:00 AM
Teaching (Summer 2012):

  • MEDHUM 301B.16, RESEARCH IN MEDHUM Synopsis
    TBA, 12:00 AM-12:00 AM
  • MEDHUM 301B.16-S, RESEARCH IN MEDHUM Synopsis
    TBA, 12:00 AM-12:00 AM
Education:

PhD History of ScienceHarvard University1983
M.D.Harvard Medical School
MDHarvard Medical School1987
MA History of ScienceHarvard University1977
BA Program of Liberal StudiesUniversity of Notre Dame1976
Ph.D.Harvard Medical School
Specialties:

Military History
Research Interests:

My major research interest is the history of disease in America, especially in the South. Until the last half of the twentieth century diseases such as malaria, yellow fever, pellagra, and hookworm marked the south as tropical, impoverished, and strikingly different from the rest of the United States. My recent work concerns the history of medicine in the American Civil war. I teach and read broadly in the history of public health, medicine, race, biology, and infectious diseases.

Current Ph.D. Students   (Former Students)

  • Rachel Levandoski  
  • Moshe Usadi  
Recent Publications   (More Publications)

  1. M. Humphreys, Review of Bobby A Wintermute, Public Health and the U. S. Military, Journal of the History of Medicine, vol. 66 no. 4 (October, 2011)
  2. M. Humphreys, Review of Richard Reid, Practicing Medicine in a Black Regiment, H-Net (June, 2011) [showpdf.php]
  3. M. Humphreys, Review of Andrew Bell, Mosquito Soldiers: Malaria, Yellow Fever and the Course of the Civil War, Journal of the Civil War Era, vol. 1 no. 1 (March, 2011), pp. 122-3
  4. M. Humphreys, The Civil War and American Medicine (Under review fall 2011), Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press
  5. M. Humphreys, "Malaria," "Typhus," and "Yellow Fever", in The Oxford Encyclopedia of American Scientific, Medical and Technological History, edited by Hugh Slotten (forthcoming), Oxford University Press, New York

During the fall of 2009 I have been in residence at the National Humanities Center (Research Triangle Park, NC) as a resident associate. In 2007 I was named to the Josiah Charles Trent Professorship in the History of Medicine. I've been honored to give several named lectureships, including the Rosen lecture at Yale, the Reynolds Lecture at University of Alabama Birmingham, and the Hudson Lecture at the University of Kansas Medical Center. I have received research support from the American Council of Learned Societies, the National Library of Medicine, the Burroughs-Wellcome History of Medicine Fund and the Trent Foundation


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