Christopher D. E. Willoughby is a fellow at the Huntington Library and Harvard University. He is also editor of the book Medicine and Healing in the Age of Slavery.
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Description
"An important book, building on an emerging body of work focused on exploring the centrality of medicine to the construction of ideas about race in the nineteenth-century United States, the perpetuation of race-based slavery, and the expansion of capitalism throughout the nation. Willoughby's compelling study makes a valuable contribution to these historiographical fields, drawing much-needed attention to the complicity of northern medical schools in shaping ideas about race in an antebellum America and on shores beyond."--Journal of Southern History "...Highly thought-provoking and timely in understanding the history of U.S...The book makes a compelling connection between our experiences today and 19th-century medical training in the United States."--LAMPHHS's The Watermark "A compelling exploration of how ideas about race were constructed by American medical professionals in the nineteenth century and then used to increase their recognition as experts. . . [A] valuable addition to the historiography."--Journal of American History