Medicine, Race, and Slavery in the Transatlantic World, 1600–1850
Past & Present Volume 271, Issue Supplement_18, May 2026 SUPPLEMENT
Medicine, Race, and Slavery in the Transatlantic World, 1600–1850
Hannah Murphy
Crafting Inability: Slavery, Medicine, and Disability in Early Modern Tuscany
Lucia Dacome
Medical Practitioners, The Archive, and the Making of Slavery in Early Modern Barbados
Hannah Murphy
The Origins of Modern Public Health in Anglo-Caribbean Slavery, 1764–1790
Sascha Auerbach
‘But Their Mouths are Sealed’: Medical Practitioners in French Colonial Courtrooms, 1828–1848
Teresa Göltl
Pathology, Heredity, and the Varieties of Man, 1650–1800
Kevin Siena
Race, Medicine, and Causation in the Eighteenth-Century Atlantic World
Suman Seth
Enduring Medical Knowledge in the Age of Slavery
Rana A Hogarth
Aetiological Politics, Mental Illness, and Affective Neuroscience in British Slave Trade Abolition
Carolyn Roberts
The Transformation of Smallpox Inoculation in the Early Modern Atlantic World
Elise A Mitchell
‘Our Ethiopian Boys’: Medicine, Missions, and the Construction of Human Difference in Northeast Africa, c.1690–1750
Brendan Röder
Healing, Mobility, and Belonging: ‘María Phelipa de Color Negro’, A Black Woman Healer Navigating the Canary Islands, 1712–1729
Carolin Schmitz

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