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“Comrades in the Labor Room” History of Medicine Presentation

On Wednesday, December 9, Paula Michaels, PhD, UI Department of History will present:  “Comrades in the Labor Room:  The International Story of the Lamaze Method.”  Time:  5:30 to 6:30, December 9 Place:  Room 2032, Main Library Light Refreshments will be served Free and open to the public For additional information, contact Ed Holtum; edwin-holtum@uiowa.edu; 335-9154Continue reading ““Comrades in the Labor Room” History of Medicine Presentation”

Notes from the Rare Book Room “Anatome animalium”

 Gerardus Blasius (1626?-1692?).  Anatome animalium.  Amsterdam, 1681.  Although Blasius was a practicing physician in Amsterdam, his real interest lay in anatomy and, in particular, comparative anatomy.  He worked closely with philosophers and scientists such as John Locke, Jan Swammerdam, and Niels Stensen to promote the study of anatomy and to widen the availability of bothContinue reading “Notes from the Rare Book Room “Anatome animalium””

Notes from the Rare Book Room “Histoire de medicine”

 Daniel Le Clerc (1652-1728). Histoire de la médecine. Nouvelle ed. Amsterdam: Aux depens de la Compagnie, 1723. Swiss physician, Daniel Le Clerc was born at Geneva and studied medicine at Montpellier and Paris. He received the M.D. degree at Valencia in 1670 and returned to Geneva to enter private practice. Although successful as a physician,Continue reading “Notes from the Rare Book Room “Histoire de medicine””

Not Just Another Pretty Face

Not Just Another Pretty Face Hardin Library’s newest exhibit traces the history of the dubious attempts to divine personality characteristics by analyzing the size, shape, structure, and composition of the human head.  It was Aristotle who coined the term, “physiognomy” to support his own writings and inclinations on the subject. Since that time the notionContinue reading “Not Just Another Pretty Face”

Notes from the Rare Book Room “Wrap up the Sword and Call me in the Morning”

But she has taen the broken lance, And washed it from the clotted gore, And salved the splinter o’er and o’er. —Sir Walter Scott: Lay of the Last Minstrel—1805 The notion that wounds can be healed from a distance dates back hundreds, perhaps thousands of years and is retained in some folk remedies today. However,Continue reading “Notes from the Rare Book Room “Wrap up the Sword and Call me in the Morning””

Reminder: Try DynaMed in place of Essential Evidence Plus

Due to budget constraints, Hardin Library must cancel our subscription to Essential Evidence Plus as of August 7. We would like to suggest that you try DynaMed in its place. DynaMed offers evidence-based information in bulleted format on a wide range of diseases and conditions, with links to references embedded within the description. If youContinue reading “Reminder: Try DynaMed in place of Essential Evidence Plus”

Notes from the Rare Book Room: The Great Herbal of Leonhart Fuchs

In the sixteenth century the same spirit which inspired Vesalius and others in the field of anatomy served also as the inspiration for the study of flora from actual specimens, culminating in what is certainly the most celebrated and probably the most beautiful herbal ever published, Fuchs’ De historia stirpium commentarii Basel, 1542. Leonhart FuchsContinue reading “Notes from the Rare Book Room: The Great Herbal of Leonhart Fuchs”