An INHH Virtual Research Workshop
Saturday, 25 March at 10:00 (CST)/16:00 (GMT)/ 17:00 (CET)
Join the committee of the International Network for the History of Hospitals (INHH) for the inaugural virtual workshop. Crisis can manifest in so many ways: hospitals going bankrupt, operating in a warzone, sex scandals, etc. But this idea of crisis extends beyond sources to how researchers approach their work from funding issues to writer’s block. Presenting on the theme of ‘Crisis in the Hospital’ will be:
Sex, Lies, and Parchment: Reputation and Regulation at Narbonne's Hospital of the Bourg in the Fourteenth Centur
Anna M. Peterson (Independent Scholar)
Surviving Destruction: St Giles’s, Norwich, and the Crisis of the Protestant Reformation
Carole Rawcliffe (University of East Anglia)
Plague, Covid and the Historian
John Henderson (Birkbeck, University of London)
Conflicts and Hospital History in Twentieth-Century Uganda
Kathleen Vongsathorn (Southern Illinois University, Edwardsville)
This first meeting will set the stage for this ongoing series. The goal of these workshops is to provide graduate, postgraduate, early career, and precarious faculty with a space to discuss their thesis, research projects, and the questions and obstacles that arise from them. Too often researchers have worked alone on their hospitals, but the INHH is committed to creating a space where this community can come together and inspire each other’s research.
To register for the workshop: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/hospitals-in-crisis-a-virtual-research-workshop-tickets-555103167517
Follow us on Twitter @HospitalHistori or check out the INHH website for upcoming workshops.
If you would like to present your work at a future INHH workshop, please contact us at: inhistoryhospital@gmail.com
Saturday, 25 March at 10:00 (CST)/16:00 (GMT)/ 17:00 (CET)
Join the committee of the International Network for the History of Hospitals (INHH) for the inaugural virtual workshop. Crisis can manifest in so many ways: hospitals going bankrupt, operating in a warzone, sex scandals, etc. But this idea of crisis extends beyond sources to how researchers approach their work from funding issues to writer’s block. Presenting on the theme of ‘Crisis in the Hospital’ will be:
Sex, Lies, and Parchment: Reputation and Regulation at Narbonne's Hospital of the Bourg in the Fourteenth Centur
Anna M. Peterson (Independent Scholar)
Surviving Destruction: St Giles’s, Norwich, and the Crisis of the Protestant Reformation
Carole Rawcliffe (University of East Anglia)
Plague, Covid and the Historian
John Henderson (Birkbeck, University of London)
Conflicts and Hospital History in Twentieth-Century Uganda
Kathleen Vongsathorn (Southern Illinois University, Edwardsville)
This first meeting will set the stage for this ongoing series. The goal of these workshops is to provide graduate, postgraduate, early career, and precarious faculty with a space to discuss their thesis, research projects, and the questions and obstacles that arise from them. Too often researchers have worked alone on their hospitals, but the INHH is committed to creating a space where this community can come together and inspire each other’s research.
To register for the workshop: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/hospitals-in-crisis-a-virtual-research-workshop-tickets-555103167517
Follow us on Twitter @HospitalHistori or check out the INHH website for upcoming workshops.
If you would like to present your work at a future INHH workshop, please contact us at: inhistoryhospital@gmail.com
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