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Antebellum Cultural History
In: A Companion to American Cultural History, S. 63-78
Cultural Theory, Dialogue, and American Cultural History
In: A Companion to American Cultural History, S. 263-278
The Cultural History of Foreign Relations
In: A Companion to American Cultural History, S. 425-436
The Nazi past in Postwar Germany’s Cultural History
In: The Nazi Perpetrator, S. 205-210
Of Scandals and Supplements: Relating Intellectual and Cultural History
In: Rethinking Modern European Intellectual History, S. 94-111
Studies in the Social and Cultural History of Modern Warfare
In: Citizen Soldiers, S. 276-277
Studies in the Social and Cultural History of Modern Warfare
In: Life between Memory and Hope, S. 336-336
Illyrians Across the Adriatic: A Cultural History of an Archaeological Culture
In: In Search of Pre-Classical Antiquity: Rediscovering Ancient Peoples in Mediterranean Europe (19th and 20th c.), S. 119-145
The New International History Meets The New Cultural History: Public Diplomacy And U.S. Foreign Relations
In: The United States and Public Diplomacy, S. 1-26
Towards a Cultural History of Barbarism from the Eighteenth Century to the Present
In: Barbarism Revisited, S. 45-62
From �Survival� to �Dialogue�: Analytic Tropes in the Study of African-Diaspora Cultural History
In: Transatlantic Caribbean
Natural Climatic Variations in the Holocene: Past Impacts on Cultural History, Human Welfare and Crisis
In: Hexagon Series on Human and Environmental Security and Peace; Facing Global Environmental Change, S. 103-118
Neonatal Jaundice: The Cultural History of the Creation and Maintenance of a "Disease" of Newborns
Examines diagnoses of neonatal jaundice, arguing that it is a self-correcting, developmental feature of newborns, & its treatment as a pediatric disorder serves to disrupt maternal bonding & nursing. Dominant cultural expectations of medicine deem anything outside the biomedical definition of "normal" as an indication of pathology. Medical elements of neonatal jaundice are explained, & the history of its treatment is traced in relation to development of the subspecialty of neonatology. Difficulties involved in doing neonatal research to determine risk potentials are discussed, along with the tendency of many clinicians to treat all babies who fall within a "zone of suspicion," rather than chance one disastrous outcome. As a result, the added burden of exaggerated pathology is placed on the newborn period. It is contended that the practice of medicine lacks a cultural perspective, & neonatal jaundice is an example of a constructed condition where social, historical, & cultural factors have combined to create both a disease & a medical/legal dilemma for doctors & parents. 45 References. J. Lindroth
Whatever Happened to the South Indian Nautch? Toward a Cultural History of Salon Dance in Madras
In: Unfinished Gestures, S. 70-111