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  1. Resident Self-Portraiture: A Reflective Tool to Explore the Journey of Becoming a Doctor.Christy L. Tharenos, Amber M. Hayden & Emily Cook - 2019 - Journal of Medical Humanities 40 (4):529-551.
    This arts- based project creatively introduces residents to photography, self-portraiture and narratives to document the longitudinal journey of becoming a family physician. Visual arts and writing can foster reflection: an important skill to cultivate in developing physicians. Unfortunately, arts based programs are lacking in many residency programs. Tools and venues that nourish physician well being and resilience may be important in today’s changing healthcare environment and epidemic of physician burnout. Residents created self-portraits with accompanying narratives throughout their three-year training. Analysis (...)
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  • The 'scientific artworks' of Doctor Paul Richer.Natasha Ruiz-Gómez - 2013 - Medical Humanities 39 (1):4-10.
    This article examines the little-known sculptures of pathology created by Doctor Paul Richer (1849–1933) in the 1890s for the so-called Musée Charcot at the Hôpital de la Salpêtrière in Paris. Under the direction of Doctor Jean-Martin Charcot (1825–1893), one of the founders of modern neurology, Richer was the head of the hospital's museum of pathological anatomy, as well as the Salpêtrière's resident artist. His ‘series of figural representations of the principal types of nervous pathology’ included busts of patients suffering from (...)
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  • Researching the irrelevant and the invisible: Sexual diversity in the judiciary.Leslie J. Moran - 2009 - Feminist Theory 10 (3):281-294.
    Early in the course of undertaking empirical research on the sexual diversity of the judiciary I had to address a particular challenge. Sexuality, I was repeatedly told, is not and ought not to be a difference that is taken into account. At best it ought to be disregarded or taken out of consideration. This generated a number of challenges for my research. How do you research and make sense of sexuality as a difference that key informants assert is absent or (...)
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  • Rewriting Bodies, Portraiting Persons? The New Genetics, the Clinic and the Figure of the Human.Joanna Latimer - 2013 - Body and Society 19 (4):3-31.
    Contemporary debate suggests that the new genetics may be changing ideas about the body and what it is to be human. Specifically, there are notions that the new genetics seems to erode the ideas that underpin modernity, such as the figure of the integrated, discrete, conscious individual body-self. Holding these ideas against the practices of genetic medicine, however, this article suggests a quite different picture; one that does not erase, but helps to keep in play, some crucial tenets of humanism. (...)
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  • (1 other version)Bilder zwischen. Öffentlichkeit und wissenschaftlicher Praxis: Neue Perspektiven für die Geschichte der Medizin, Naturwissenschaften und Technik.Lars Bluma & Sybilla Nikolow - 2002 - NTM Zeitschrift für Geschichte der Wissenschaften, Technik und Medizin 10 (4):201-208.
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  • Women and the Workplace. Collaborative Networks of Women Geneticists in Mexico in the 1960s and early 1970s.Ana Barahona - 2020 - Perspectives on Science 28 (2):201-222.
    This paper will address the collaborative networks and the gendered organization of the scientific work at the first Unit on Human Genetics of the Mexican Institute for Social Security. There, women and men had different tasks, duties and authority according to their gender and individual and professional skills. I will focus on physician Susana Kofman, who specialized in cytogenetics with Jérôme Lejeune and Jean de Grouchy in France, and physician Leonor Buentello, who graduated in virus genetics in Germany. This narrative (...)
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