Transforming Medical Education

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Black
Cameroon
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Chinese
computers
decolonizing
digital anatomy
doctors
early modern
emotions
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Finland
Hackett College
Hippocratic oath
History medicine
humanities
India
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Institute
Irish
islamic
Japanese
Jessie White
justice
knowledge transmission
Mario Avicenna
medieval
Mexican revolution
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NOSM
nursing
oral
pedagogy
plague texts
post-colonial
race
racism
sanitorium
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surgery
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Women
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Product details

  • ISBN 9780228010722
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 11 Apr 2022
  • Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
  • Publication City/Country: CA
  • Product Form: Hardback
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In recent decades, researchers have studied the cultures of medicine and the ways in which context and identity shape both individual experiences and structural barriers in medical education. The essays in this collection offer new insights into the deep histories of these processes, across time and around the globe.

Transforming Medical Education compiles twenty-one historical case studies that foreground processes of learning, teaching, and defining medical communities in educational contexts. The chapters are organized around the themes of knowledge transmission, social justice, identity, pedagogy, and the surprising affinities between medical and historical practice. By juxtaposing original research on diverse geographies and eras – from medieval Japan to twentieth-century Canada, and from colonial Cameroon to early Republican China – the volume disrupts traditional historiographies of medical education by making room for schools of medicine for revolutionaries, digital cadavers, emotional medical students, and the world’s first mandatory Indigenous community placement in an accredited medical curriculum. This unique collection of international scholarship honours historian, physician, and professor Jacalyn Duffin for her outstanding contributions to the history of medicine and medical education.

An invaluable scholarly resource and teaching tool, Transforming Medical Education offers a provocative study of what it means to teach, learn, and belong in medicine.

Delia Gavrus is associate professor in the History Department at the University of Winnipeg. Susan Lamb is the Jason A. Hannah Chair in the History of Medicine at the University of Ottawa.