Insights from the Collections
The Consortium’s collections provide many opportunities to learn more about the history of research in human cellular biology, the genetic archive, and heredity. Indeed, a significant amount of the research supporting the presentations in this video was conducted using Consortium-member archives.
Our cross-institutional search tool allows researchers to investigate materials across multiple institutions from a single interface. With more than 4.4 million catalog records of rare books and manuscripts, the Consortium’s search hub offers scholars and the public the ability to identify and locate relevant materials.
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Some archival materials related to this topic include:
John T. Carter Papers, College of Physicians of Philadelphia
Daniel Joseph McCarthy Papers, College of Physicians of Philadelphia
Du Pont Merck Pharmaceutical Company miscellany, 1991-1997, Hagley Museum and Library
William H. Helfand Popular Medicine Ephemera Collection, Library Company of Philadelphia
The editorial records of The Medical Letter, a journal of pharmacology, Rockefeller Archive Center
Vincent Dole Papers – Correspondence Files, Rockefeller Archive Center
Commonwealth Fund – Grants, Series 18, Rockefeller Archive Center
Commonwealth Fund – Mental Hygiene Program, Rockefeller Archive Center
Dally, Ann Gwendolen, and Dally, Peter John Papers, Wellcome Collection
William Helfand collection of medical ephemera, 1817-2010, Yale University Library
Medicine and Madison Avenue
Related publications from our speakers:
Remaking the American Patient: How Madison Avenue and Modern Medicine Turned Patients into Consumers, by Nancy Tomes; North Carolina, 2016.
Patients as Policy Actors, edited by Beatrix Hoffman, Nancy Tomes, Rachel Grob, Mark Schlesinger; Rutgers, 2011.
Happy Pills in America: From Miltown to Prozac, by David Herzberg; Johns Hopkins, 2010.
Medicine's Moving Pictures Medicine, Health, and Bodies in American Film and Television, edited by Leslie J. Reagan, Nancy Tomes, Paula A. Treichler; Rochester, 2007.
The Gospel of Germs: Men, Women and the Microbe in American Life, by Nancy Tomes; Harvard, 1999.
The Art of Asylum-Keeping: Thomas Story Kirkbride and the Origins of American Psychiatry, by Nancy Tomes; Pennsylvania, 1994.
See also recent work from our fellows:
“A Mind Prostrate”: Physicians, Opiates, and Insanity in the Civil War’s Aftermath, Jonathan Jones
David Herzberg is Associate Professor of History at the University at Buffalo (SUNY). His current research explores the history of addictive pharmaceuticals in the 20th century’s consumer culture. Among other places his work has appeared in American Quarterly, the Bulletin of the History of Medicine, the American Journal of Public Health, and in a book on the cultural history of psychiatric medicines titled Happy Pills in America: From Miltown to Prozac.