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9-6-2007
Pandemic Bibliography
S. Ray Granade
Ouachita Baptist University, [email protected]
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PANDEMIC BIBLIOGRAPHY
9/6/07
Books
General
Adler, Robert E. Medical Firsts: From Hippocrates to the Human Genome.
Sons, c2004. R 133 .A43 2004
Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley &
Alchon, Suzanne. A Pest in the Land: New World Epidemics in a Global Perspective. Albuquerque:
New Mexico University Press, 2003. [smallpox, measles, bubonic plague]
Allen, Arthur. Vaccine: The Controversial Story of Medicine's Greatest Lifesaver.
Norton, c2007. RA 638 .A45 2007
Allen, Peter L. The Wages of Sin: Sex and Disease, Past and Present.
Press, 2000. RA 644.V4 .A45 2000
New York: W.W.
Chicago: University of Chicago
Andreski, Stanislav. Syphilis, Puritanism, and Witch Hunts: Historical Explanations in the Light of Medicine
and Psychoanalysis with a Forecast about AIDS. New York: St. Martin's, 1989.
Archer, Jules. Epidemic!: The Story of the Disease Detectives.
c1977. RA 653 .A7
New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich,
Armus, Diego, ed. Disease in the History of Modern Latin America: From Malaria to AIDS.
Duke University Press, 2003. 614.428 D611a
Bray, R.S. Armies of Pestilence: The Impact of Disease.
B827a
New York:
Durham:
Barnes & Noble, 1996. 614.49
Cliff, Andrew, Peter Haggett, and Matthew Smallman-Raynor. Deciphering Global Epidemics:
Analytical Approaches to the Disease Records of World Cities, 1888-1912. Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 1988.
Cook, Noble David. Born to Die: Disease and New World Conquest, 1492-1650. New Approaches to the
Americas. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1998. 614.497 C771b
Craddock, Susan. City of Plagues: Disease, Poverty, and Deviance in San Francisco. Minneapolis:
University
of Minnesota Press, 2000.
Diamond, Jared M. Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies.
c1997. 303.4 D537gu
Drexler, Madeline. Secret Agents: The Menace of Emerging Infections.
Press, c2002. 614.4 D777s
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Washington, D.C.: Joseph Henry
Eliot, Charles W., ed. Scientific Papers; Physiology, Medicine, Surgery, Geology.
c1910. 808.8 H261 v.38
New York: P. F. Collier,
Ewald, Paul W. Plague Time: How Stealth Infections Cause Cancers, Heart Disease, and Other Deadly
Ailments. New York: Free Press, c2000. RB 156 .E93 2000
Farmer, Paul. Infections and Inequalities: The Modern Plagues.
c1999. RA 418.5.P6 F37 1999
Berkeley: University of California Press,
Fisher, Jeffrey A. The Plague Makers: How We Are Creating Catastrophic New Epidemics—And What We
Must Do to Avert Them. New York: Simon & Schuster, c1994. RM 267 .F53 1994
Garrett, Laurie. Betrayal of Trust: The Collapse of Global Public Health.
RA 441 .G37 2000
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Garrett, Laurie. The Coming Plague: Newly Emerging Diseases in a World Out of Balance.
Farrar, Straus and Giroux, c1994. RA 651 .G37 1994
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Gilman, Sander L.
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Cornell University Press,1988. 306.46 G487d
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Hays, J.N. The Burdens of Disease: Epidemics and Human Response in Western History.
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New
Jones, David S. Rationalizing Epidemics: Meanings and Uses of American Indian Mortality since 1600.
Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2004.
Kimball, Ann Marie. Risky Trade: Infectuous Disease in the Era of Global Trade. Burlington, VT:
Ashgate Publishing Company, c2006.
Kiple, Kenneth F., ed. The Cambridge Historical Dictionary of Disease.
University Press, 2003.
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Plague, Pox & Pestilence.
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Kraut, Alan. Silent Travelers: Germs, Genes, and the “Immigrant Menace”.
University Press, 1994. RA 448.5.I44 K73 1995
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614.49
Johns Hopkins
Lashley, Felissa R. and Jerry D. Durham, ed. Emerging Infectious Diseases: Trends and Issues.
York: Springer Pub., c2002. 616.9 E53L RA 643 .E465 2002
New
Martin, Emily. Flexible Bodies: Tracking Immunity in American Culture - from the Days of Polio to the Age of
AIDS. Boston: Beacon, 1994. GN 296.5.U6 M37 1994
Massey, Edmund. A Sermon Against the Dangerous and Sinful Practice of Inoculation: Preach'd at St.
Andrew's Holborn, on Sunday, July the 8th, 1722. Boston: Reprinted for B. Indicott, 1730.
Microfiche 277 M416s
McBride, David. From TB to AIDS: Epidemics among Urban Blacks since 1900. Albany: State
University of New York Press, 1991. 616.0089 M119f
McNeill, John R. Epidemics and Geopolitics in the American Tropics, 1650-1900. New York:
Cambridge University Press, 2007.
Miller, Genevieve, ed. Letters of Edward Jenner, and Other Documents Concerning the Early History of
Vaccination. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, c1983. 614.521 J54L
Morantz-Sanchez, Regina. Conduct Unbecoming a Woman: Medicine on Trial in Turn-of-the-Century
Brooklyn. New York: Oxford University Press, 2000. RG 67.U6 M67 1999
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Washington, D.C.: American Society for Microbiology, 2003.
Nikiforuk, Andrew. The Fourth Horseman: A Short History of Epidemics, Plagues, Famine and Other
Scourges. New York: M. Evans and Co., c1993. 614.49 N692.f
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Press/Collier Macmillan, 1989. 362.19697 B357p RA 644.A25 B39 1989
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Epstein, Steven. Impure Science: AIDS, Activism, and the Politics of Knowledge. Berkeley: University of
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Fee, Elizabeth and Daniel M. Fox, eds.
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Feldman, Eric A. and Ronald Bayer, eds. Blood Feuds: AIDS, Blood, and the Politics of Medical Disaster.
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Field, Mark G. and Judyth L. Twigg, eds. Russia's Torn Safety Nets: Health and Social Welfare during the
Transition. New York: St. Martin's, 2000.
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Cholera
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Fairbanks, Robert B. “From Better Dwellings to Better Community: Changing Approaches to the
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Fent, Cindy. “Some Medical Aspects of the Lewis and Clark Expedition.” North Dakota History
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Ferguson, Cynthia Comery. “Public Need and Public Health: The Early Years of the Providence
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Clio Medica 1977
West Texas Historical
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Bulletin of the
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Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences 1976 31(4): 395-420.
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History of Medicine and Allied Sciences 1983 38(4): 432-449.
Journal of the
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Medicina nei Secoli 1999 11(1): 85-105.
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Medical History 1983 27(2): 203-213.
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Goldblatt, Roy. “From Ghetto to Ghetto . . . And Maybe a Farm, too.”
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American Studies in
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History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences
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Perspectives in Biology and Medicine
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[yellow fever]
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Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London
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American Literary
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Patterns of
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Western States Jewish Historical
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American Literary
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Prologue
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Journal of Interdisciplinary History
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Janus
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South Florida History
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Epidemic in Philadelphia in 1793.” Teaching History: A Journal of Methods 2003 28(1): 14-21.
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16(1):
15-22.
North Louisiana Historical Association Journal 1985
Will, Thomas E. “Liberalism, Republicanism, and Philadelphia’s Black Elite in the Early Republic:
The Social Thought of Absalom Jones and Richard Allen.” Pennsylvania History 2002 69(4):
558-576.
Wisner, Elizabeth.
411-418.
“The Howard Association of New Orleans.”
Social Service Review 1967 41(4):
Workman, Mark. “Medical Practice in Philadelphia at the Time of the Yellow Fever Epidemic,
1793.” Pennsylvania Folklife 1978 27(4): 33-39.
Wrenn, Lynette B. “The Memphis Sewer Experiment.” Tennessee Historical Quarterly 1985 44(3): 340349.
Wrenn, Lynette Boney. “The Impact of Yellow Fever on Memphis: A Reappraisal.”
Historical Society Papers 1987 41: 4-18.
West Tennessee
Wright, Franklin. “Annie Cook: ‘The Mary Magdalene of Memphis.’”
Papers 1989 43: 44-54.
Writer, James V.
“Did the Mosquito Do It?”
West Tennessee Historical Society
American History 1997 31(6): 44-51.
Wygant, Larry. “A Sickly City: Health and Disease in Antebellum Galveston, Texas.” Houston Review
1997 19(1): 27-38.
Ziperman, H. Haskell. “The Panama Canal: A Medical History.”
States) 1971 23(6-7): 8-18.
Américas (Organization of American
Zulueta, Julián de. “Health and Military Factors in Vernon’s Failure at Cartagena.”
1992 78(2): 127-141.
Lehman, Amy. “‘Call Me Gypsy’: Anna Cora Mowatt and Mesmerism.”
and Film 2002 29(1): 49-65.
Mariner’s Mirror
Nineteenth Century Theatre
Sullivan-Fowler, Micaela. “Doubtful Theories, Drastic Therapies: Autointoxication and Faddism in
the Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries.” Journal of the History of Medicine and
Allied Sciences 1995 50(3): 364-390.
The hugely successful career of Charles A. Tyrrell (1843-1918) shows how the theory of
autointoxication, which argued that disease was produced by internal self-poisoning in the digestive
tract, was used in alternative as well as orthodox medicine during the late 19th and early 20th
centuries. Tyrrell's patented “J.B.L. (Joy, Beauty, Life) Cascade,” a syringe enema device, reportedly
relieved and prevented such diseases as dysentery and tuberculosis. An expert at marketing and in
the selective use of medical theory, Tyrrell toned down his claims to be able to remedy all diseases in
the light of condemnation by the American Medical Association, though in fact his Cascade was less
dangerous than some orthodox procedures based on the idea of autointoxication. The
preoccupation with bowel regularity and the autointoxication rationale can still be found in
late-20th-century alternative medicine.
Notables who died from (or had) TB: Chopin (D), Beethoven, Wm Rufus King VP (D), Union
scout Charles S. Bell (D), Gifford Pinchott’s “spiritual wife” (D), Emily Dickinson, Napoleon
Bonaparte, Stephen Crane (D), Mozart, Giuliano d’Medici (D), Ishikawa Takuboku Japan’s 1st
modern poet (D), Sara Haardt HL Mencken’s wife (D), the first wife of Sir John Macdonald
Canada's first prime minister (D), John Martin first chief justice of the Cherokee Nation (D), author
Charles Brockden Brown (D), Charlotte Bronte (D), country music composer & singer jimmie
Rodgers (D), Henry David Thoreau (D), Thomas Wolfe (D), poetess Mary M. Chase (D). Usually
died in 30s.
Montaigne, Michel de. The Autobiography of Michel de Montaigne; Comprising the Life of the Wisest Man of
His Times: His Childhood, Youth, and Prime; His Adventures in Love and Marriage, at Court, and in
Office, War, Revolution, and Plague; His Travels at Home and Abroad; His Habits, Tastes, Whims and
Opinions. Selected, Arranged, Edited, Prefaced, and Mostly Translated Anew from His Essays, &c.,
Withholding No Signal or Curious Detail, by Marvin Lowenthal. New York: Houghton
Mifflin Company, 1935. PQ 1643 .A22
The Black Death [videorecording] / produced by Filmroos Inc. for A & E Network. New York:
A&E Home Video: New Video Group, p1997, c1996. OBU Media Services 940.19
B627d
The Black Death [videorecording] / produced and directed by Emma De'ath; a co-production
between the Learning Channel ... [et al.] ; Transatlantic. New York: Ambrose Video, c1995.
HSU Circulation desk VHS RC172 .M34 1995
The Great Plague [videorecording] / a presentation of Films for the Humanities & Sciences; produced
by Juniper Communications for TLC and Channel 4 International. Princeton, NJ: Films
for the Humanities & Sciences, 2002, c2001. OBU Media Services 362.1969232 G786