Gender, Health, and Popular Culture
Historical Perspectives
Herausgeber: Warsh, Cheryl Krasnick
Gender, Health, and Popular Culture
Historical Perspectives
Herausgeber: Warsh, Cheryl Krasnick
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Health is a gendered concept in Western cultures. Customarily it is associated with strength in men and beauty in women. This gendered concept was transmitted through visual representations of the ideal female and male bodies, and ubiquitous media images resulted in the absorption of universal standards of beauty and health and generalized desires to achieve them. Today, genuine or self-styled experts-from physicians to newspaper columnists to advertisers-offer advice on achieving optimal health. Topics in this collection are wide ranging and include childbirth advice in Victorian Australia…mehr
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Health is a gendered concept in Western cultures. Customarily it is associated with strength in men and beauty in women. This gendered concept was transmitted through visual representations of the ideal female and male bodies, and ubiquitous media images resulted in the absorption of universal standards of beauty and health and generalized desires to achieve them. Today, genuine or self-styled experts-from physicians to newspaper columnists to advertisers-offer advice on achieving optimal health. Topics in this collection are wide ranging and include childbirth advice in Victorian Australia and Cold War America, menstruation films, Canadian abortion tourism, the Pap smear, the Body Worlds exhibition, and fat liberation. Masculinity is explored among drunkards in antebellum Philadelphia and family memoirs during the 1980s AIDS epidemic. Seemingly objective public health advisories are shown to be as influenced by commercial interests, class, gender, and other social differentiations as marketing approaches are, and the message presented is mediated to varying degrees by those receiving it. This book will be of interest to scholars in women's studies, health studies, marketing, media studies, social history and anthropology, and popular culture.
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Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Wilfrid Laurier University Press
- Seitenzahl: 330
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. Juli 2011
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 228mm x 151mm x 22mm
- Gewicht: 473g
- ISBN-13: 9781554582174
- ISBN-10: 1554582172
- Artikelnr.: 28890414
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Verlag: Wilfrid Laurier University Press
- Seitenzahl: 330
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. Juli 2011
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 228mm x 151mm x 22mm
- Gewicht: 473g
- ISBN-13: 9781554582174
- ISBN-10: 1554582172
- Artikelnr.: 28890414
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
Table of Contents for Gender, Health, and Popular Culture, edited by Cheryl
Krasnick Warsh
Introduction Cheryl Krasnick Warsh
Part I: The Transmission of Health Information
Confined: Constructions of Childbirth in Popular and Elite Medical Culture
in Late Nineteenth-Century Australia Lisa Featherstone
Eating for Two: Shaping Mothers' Figures and Babies' Futures in Modern
American Culture Lisa Forman Cody
Advice to Adolescents: Menstrual Health and Menstrual Education Films,
1946-1982 Sharra L. Vostral
Controlling Conception: Images of Women, Safety, Sexuality and the Pill in
the Sixties Heather Molyneaux
All Aboard? Canadian Women's Abortion Tourism, 1960-1980 Christabelle
Sethna
Controlling Cervical Cancer from Screening to Vaccinations: An American
Perspective Kirsten E. Gardner
The Challenge of Developing and Publicizing Cervical Cancer Screening
Programs: A Canadian Perspective Mandy Hadenko
II: Popular Representations of the Body in Sickness and Health
Hideous Monsters before the Eye: Delirium tremens and Manhood in Antebellum
Philadelphia Ric N. Caric
From La Bambola to a Toronto Striptease: Drawing Out Public Consent to
Gender Differentiation with Anatomical Materials Annette Burfoot
Let Me Hear Your Body Talk: Aerobics for Fat Women Only, 1981-1985 Jenny
Ellison
"The Closest Thing to Perfect": Celebrity and the Body Politics of Jamie
Lee Curtis Christina Burr
"Every Generation Has Its War": Representations of Gay Men with AIDS and
Their Parents in the United States, 1983-1993 Heather Murray
Bibliography
Contributors
Index
Contributors' Bios
Annette Burfoot is an associate professor of sociology at Queen's
University, teaching feminist science studies and visual culture. She
edited The Encyclopedia of Reproductive Technologies and co-edited (with
Susan Lord).
Ric N. Caric is a professor of international and interdisciplinary studies
at Morehead State University in Kentucky. His social theory and American
history articles have appeared in Philosophy in the Contemporary World,
Pennsylvania History, and other journals. Caric is finishing a book on
popular culture in antebellum Philadelphia, and his political commentary
can be found at his "Red State Impressions" blog.
Lisa Forman Cody is an associate professor of history and associate dean of
the Faculty of History at Claremont McKenna College in Los Angeles. She is
the author of Birthing the Nation: Sex, Science, and the Conception of
Eighteenth-Century Britons (2005), which won the Berkshire Conference of
Women Historians Best First Book of the Year Prize, the Phi Alpha Theta
Best First Book Prize, and the Western Association of Women Historians
Frances Keller Richardson-Sierra Prize. She is working on two books
tentatively entitled Divided We Stand: Divorce and Sexual Scandal in the
Age of the American Revolution and Imaginary Values: Health, Wealth, and
Human Labor in the British Imperial imagination, 1660-1840.
Jenny Ellison recently received her doctorate in history from York
University in Toronto. Her research on the fat-acceptance movement has
appeared in the Fat Studies Reader (2009) as well as the Journal of the
Canadian Historical Association. Her current research examines self-esteem
as a women's health issue.
Lisa Featherstone is a lecturer in Australian history at the University of
Newcastle, Australia. She has published in gender history, medical history,
and the history of sexuality, and is currently writing a book entitled
Let's Talk about Sex: Histories of Sexuality in Australia from Federation
to the Pill, to be published by Cambridge Scholars Publishing in 2011.
Kirsten E. Gardner is an associate professor of history and women's studies
at the University of Texas at San Antonio. She is the author of Early
Detection: Women, Cancer, and Awareness Campaigns in Twentieth-Century
United States.
Mandy Hadenko is a doctoral candidate in the Department of History, York
University, Toronto. Her dissertation is entitled "Cervical Cancer and the
Canadian Woman: Provincial Roles in Cancer Prevention."
Heather Molyneaux recently received her doctorate in history from the
University of New Brunswick. Her dissertation examines the representation
of women in the Canadian Medical Association Journal pharmaceutical
advertisements. She has published in Acadiensis and has an article
co-written with Linda Kealey in the Journal of Canadian Studies.
Heather Murray is an assistant professor in the Department of History,
University of Ottawa. Her monograph, Not in This Family: Gays and Their
Parents in North America, 1945-1990s, was published in 2010 by the
University of Pennsylvania Press.
Christabelle Sethna is an associate professor at the Institute of Women's
Studies and Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Ottawa. She has
published numerous articles on sex education, contraception, and abortion
history. She has completed a SSHRC-funded study on the impact of the birth
control pill on single Canadian women between 1960 and 1980. She is
currently working on another SSHRC-funded research project on the travel
that Canadian women undertake to access abortion services, past and
present.
Sharra L. Vostral is an associate professor, holding a joint appointment in
the Department of Gender and Women's Studies and the Department of History
at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. Her book, Under Wraps: A
History of Menstrual Hygiene Technology (2008), examines the social and
technological history of sanitary napkins and tampons, and the efforts to
hide menstruation and menstrual artifacts, as well as the effects of
technology upon women's experiences of menstruation. She co-edited
Feminist Technology (2010), which explores feminist methods, theories,
politics, and interventions in the design of artifacts. Her current
research is a history of toxic shock syndrome and its relationship to
tampon use during the early 1980s.
Cheryl Krasnick Warsh is a professor of history at Vancouver Island
University in Nanaimo, British Columbia. Her publications include
Prescribed Norms: Women and Health in Canada and the U.S. since 1800;
Moments of Unreason: The Practice of Canadian Psychiatry and the Homewood
Retreat, 1883-1923; and Consuming Modernity: Gendered Behaviour and
Consumerism before the Baby Boom.
Krasnick Warsh
Introduction Cheryl Krasnick Warsh
Part I: The Transmission of Health Information
Confined: Constructions of Childbirth in Popular and Elite Medical Culture
in Late Nineteenth-Century Australia Lisa Featherstone
Eating for Two: Shaping Mothers' Figures and Babies' Futures in Modern
American Culture Lisa Forman Cody
Advice to Adolescents: Menstrual Health and Menstrual Education Films,
1946-1982 Sharra L. Vostral
Controlling Conception: Images of Women, Safety, Sexuality and the Pill in
the Sixties Heather Molyneaux
All Aboard? Canadian Women's Abortion Tourism, 1960-1980 Christabelle
Sethna
Controlling Cervical Cancer from Screening to Vaccinations: An American
Perspective Kirsten E. Gardner
The Challenge of Developing and Publicizing Cervical Cancer Screening
Programs: A Canadian Perspective Mandy Hadenko
II: Popular Representations of the Body in Sickness and Health
Hideous Monsters before the Eye: Delirium tremens and Manhood in Antebellum
Philadelphia Ric N. Caric
From La Bambola to a Toronto Striptease: Drawing Out Public Consent to
Gender Differentiation with Anatomical Materials Annette Burfoot
Let Me Hear Your Body Talk: Aerobics for Fat Women Only, 1981-1985 Jenny
Ellison
"The Closest Thing to Perfect": Celebrity and the Body Politics of Jamie
Lee Curtis Christina Burr
"Every Generation Has Its War": Representations of Gay Men with AIDS and
Their Parents in the United States, 1983-1993 Heather Murray
Bibliography
Contributors
Index
Contributors' Bios
Annette Burfoot is an associate professor of sociology at Queen's
University, teaching feminist science studies and visual culture. She
edited The Encyclopedia of Reproductive Technologies and co-edited (with
Susan Lord).
Ric N. Caric is a professor of international and interdisciplinary studies
at Morehead State University in Kentucky. His social theory and American
history articles have appeared in Philosophy in the Contemporary World,
Pennsylvania History, and other journals. Caric is finishing a book on
popular culture in antebellum Philadelphia, and his political commentary
can be found at his "Red State Impressions" blog.
Lisa Forman Cody is an associate professor of history and associate dean of
the Faculty of History at Claremont McKenna College in Los Angeles. She is
the author of Birthing the Nation: Sex, Science, and the Conception of
Eighteenth-Century Britons (2005), which won the Berkshire Conference of
Women Historians Best First Book of the Year Prize, the Phi Alpha Theta
Best First Book Prize, and the Western Association of Women Historians
Frances Keller Richardson-Sierra Prize. She is working on two books
tentatively entitled Divided We Stand: Divorce and Sexual Scandal in the
Age of the American Revolution and Imaginary Values: Health, Wealth, and
Human Labor in the British Imperial imagination, 1660-1840.
Jenny Ellison recently received her doctorate in history from York
University in Toronto. Her research on the fat-acceptance movement has
appeared in the Fat Studies Reader (2009) as well as the Journal of the
Canadian Historical Association. Her current research examines self-esteem
as a women's health issue.
Lisa Featherstone is a lecturer in Australian history at the University of
Newcastle, Australia. She has published in gender history, medical history,
and the history of sexuality, and is currently writing a book entitled
Let's Talk about Sex: Histories of Sexuality in Australia from Federation
to the Pill, to be published by Cambridge Scholars Publishing in 2011.
Kirsten E. Gardner is an associate professor of history and women's studies
at the University of Texas at San Antonio. She is the author of Early
Detection: Women, Cancer, and Awareness Campaigns in Twentieth-Century
United States.
Mandy Hadenko is a doctoral candidate in the Department of History, York
University, Toronto. Her dissertation is entitled "Cervical Cancer and the
Canadian Woman: Provincial Roles in Cancer Prevention."
Heather Molyneaux recently received her doctorate in history from the
University of New Brunswick. Her dissertation examines the representation
of women in the Canadian Medical Association Journal pharmaceutical
advertisements. She has published in Acadiensis and has an article
co-written with Linda Kealey in the Journal of Canadian Studies.
Heather Murray is an assistant professor in the Department of History,
University of Ottawa. Her monograph, Not in This Family: Gays and Their
Parents in North America, 1945-1990s, was published in 2010 by the
University of Pennsylvania Press.
Christabelle Sethna is an associate professor at the Institute of Women's
Studies and Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Ottawa. She has
published numerous articles on sex education, contraception, and abortion
history. She has completed a SSHRC-funded study on the impact of the birth
control pill on single Canadian women between 1960 and 1980. She is
currently working on another SSHRC-funded research project on the travel
that Canadian women undertake to access abortion services, past and
present.
Sharra L. Vostral is an associate professor, holding a joint appointment in
the Department of Gender and Women's Studies and the Department of History
at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. Her book, Under Wraps: A
History of Menstrual Hygiene Technology (2008), examines the social and
technological history of sanitary napkins and tampons, and the efforts to
hide menstruation and menstrual artifacts, as well as the effects of
technology upon women's experiences of menstruation. She co-edited
Feminist Technology (2010), which explores feminist methods, theories,
politics, and interventions in the design of artifacts. Her current
research is a history of toxic shock syndrome and its relationship to
tampon use during the early 1980s.
Cheryl Krasnick Warsh is a professor of history at Vancouver Island
University in Nanaimo, British Columbia. Her publications include
Prescribed Norms: Women and Health in Canada and the U.S. since 1800;
Moments of Unreason: The Practice of Canadian Psychiatry and the Homewood
Retreat, 1883-1923; and Consuming Modernity: Gendered Behaviour and
Consumerism before the Baby Boom.
Table of Contents for Gender, Health, and Popular Culture, edited by Cheryl
Krasnick Warsh
Introduction Cheryl Krasnick Warsh
Part I: The Transmission of Health Information
Confined: Constructions of Childbirth in Popular and Elite Medical Culture
in Late Nineteenth-Century Australia Lisa Featherstone
Eating for Two: Shaping Mothers' Figures and Babies' Futures in Modern
American Culture Lisa Forman Cody
Advice to Adolescents: Menstrual Health and Menstrual Education Films,
1946-1982 Sharra L. Vostral
Controlling Conception: Images of Women, Safety, Sexuality and the Pill in
the Sixties Heather Molyneaux
All Aboard? Canadian Women's Abortion Tourism, 1960-1980 Christabelle
Sethna
Controlling Cervical Cancer from Screening to Vaccinations: An American
Perspective Kirsten E. Gardner
The Challenge of Developing and Publicizing Cervical Cancer Screening
Programs: A Canadian Perspective Mandy Hadenko
II: Popular Representations of the Body in Sickness and Health
Hideous Monsters before the Eye: Delirium tremens and Manhood in Antebellum
Philadelphia Ric N. Caric
From La Bambola to a Toronto Striptease: Drawing Out Public Consent to
Gender Differentiation with Anatomical Materials Annette Burfoot
Let Me Hear Your Body Talk: Aerobics for Fat Women Only, 1981-1985 Jenny
Ellison
"The Closest Thing to Perfect": Celebrity and the Body Politics of Jamie
Lee Curtis Christina Burr
"Every Generation Has Its War": Representations of Gay Men with AIDS and
Their Parents in the United States, 1983-1993 Heather Murray
Bibliography
Contributors
Index
Contributors' Bios
Annette Burfoot is an associate professor of sociology at Queen's
University, teaching feminist science studies and visual culture. She
edited The Encyclopedia of Reproductive Technologies and co-edited (with
Susan Lord).
Ric N. Caric is a professor of international and interdisciplinary studies
at Morehead State University in Kentucky. His social theory and American
history articles have appeared in Philosophy in the Contemporary World,
Pennsylvania History, and other journals. Caric is finishing a book on
popular culture in antebellum Philadelphia, and his political commentary
can be found at his "Red State Impressions" blog.
Lisa Forman Cody is an associate professor of history and associate dean of
the Faculty of History at Claremont McKenna College in Los Angeles. She is
the author of Birthing the Nation: Sex, Science, and the Conception of
Eighteenth-Century Britons (2005), which won the Berkshire Conference of
Women Historians Best First Book of the Year Prize, the Phi Alpha Theta
Best First Book Prize, and the Western Association of Women Historians
Frances Keller Richardson-Sierra Prize. She is working on two books
tentatively entitled Divided We Stand: Divorce and Sexual Scandal in the
Age of the American Revolution and Imaginary Values: Health, Wealth, and
Human Labor in the British Imperial imagination, 1660-1840.
Jenny Ellison recently received her doctorate in history from York
University in Toronto. Her research on the fat-acceptance movement has
appeared in the Fat Studies Reader (2009) as well as the Journal of the
Canadian Historical Association. Her current research examines self-esteem
as a women's health issue.
Lisa Featherstone is a lecturer in Australian history at the University of
Newcastle, Australia. She has published in gender history, medical history,
and the history of sexuality, and is currently writing a book entitled
Let's Talk about Sex: Histories of Sexuality in Australia from Federation
to the Pill, to be published by Cambridge Scholars Publishing in 2011.
Kirsten E. Gardner is an associate professor of history and women's studies
at the University of Texas at San Antonio. She is the author of Early
Detection: Women, Cancer, and Awareness Campaigns in Twentieth-Century
United States.
Mandy Hadenko is a doctoral candidate in the Department of History, York
University, Toronto. Her dissertation is entitled "Cervical Cancer and the
Canadian Woman: Provincial Roles in Cancer Prevention."
Heather Molyneaux recently received her doctorate in history from the
University of New Brunswick. Her dissertation examines the representation
of women in the Canadian Medical Association Journal pharmaceutical
advertisements. She has published in Acadiensis and has an article
co-written with Linda Kealey in the Journal of Canadian Studies.
Heather Murray is an assistant professor in the Department of History,
University of Ottawa. Her monograph, Not in This Family: Gays and Their
Parents in North America, 1945-1990s, was published in 2010 by the
University of Pennsylvania Press.
Christabelle Sethna is an associate professor at the Institute of Women's
Studies and Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Ottawa. She has
published numerous articles on sex education, contraception, and abortion
history. She has completed a SSHRC-funded study on the impact of the birth
control pill on single Canadian women between 1960 and 1980. She is
currently working on another SSHRC-funded research project on the travel
that Canadian women undertake to access abortion services, past and
present.
Sharra L. Vostral is an associate professor, holding a joint appointment in
the Department of Gender and Women's Studies and the Department of History
at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. Her book, Under Wraps: A
History of Menstrual Hygiene Technology (2008), examines the social and
technological history of sanitary napkins and tampons, and the efforts to
hide menstruation and menstrual artifacts, as well as the effects of
technology upon women's experiences of menstruation. She co-edited
Feminist Technology (2010), which explores feminist methods, theories,
politics, and interventions in the design of artifacts. Her current
research is a history of toxic shock syndrome and its relationship to
tampon use during the early 1980s.
Cheryl Krasnick Warsh is a professor of history at Vancouver Island
University in Nanaimo, British Columbia. Her publications include
Prescribed Norms: Women and Health in Canada and the U.S. since 1800;
Moments of Unreason: The Practice of Canadian Psychiatry and the Homewood
Retreat, 1883-1923; and Consuming Modernity: Gendered Behaviour and
Consumerism before the Baby Boom.
Krasnick Warsh
Introduction Cheryl Krasnick Warsh
Part I: The Transmission of Health Information
Confined: Constructions of Childbirth in Popular and Elite Medical Culture
in Late Nineteenth-Century Australia Lisa Featherstone
Eating for Two: Shaping Mothers' Figures and Babies' Futures in Modern
American Culture Lisa Forman Cody
Advice to Adolescents: Menstrual Health and Menstrual Education Films,
1946-1982 Sharra L. Vostral
Controlling Conception: Images of Women, Safety, Sexuality and the Pill in
the Sixties Heather Molyneaux
All Aboard? Canadian Women's Abortion Tourism, 1960-1980 Christabelle
Sethna
Controlling Cervical Cancer from Screening to Vaccinations: An American
Perspective Kirsten E. Gardner
The Challenge of Developing and Publicizing Cervical Cancer Screening
Programs: A Canadian Perspective Mandy Hadenko
II: Popular Representations of the Body in Sickness and Health
Hideous Monsters before the Eye: Delirium tremens and Manhood in Antebellum
Philadelphia Ric N. Caric
From La Bambola to a Toronto Striptease: Drawing Out Public Consent to
Gender Differentiation with Anatomical Materials Annette Burfoot
Let Me Hear Your Body Talk: Aerobics for Fat Women Only, 1981-1985 Jenny
Ellison
"The Closest Thing to Perfect": Celebrity and the Body Politics of Jamie
Lee Curtis Christina Burr
"Every Generation Has Its War": Representations of Gay Men with AIDS and
Their Parents in the United States, 1983-1993 Heather Murray
Bibliography
Contributors
Index
Contributors' Bios
Annette Burfoot is an associate professor of sociology at Queen's
University, teaching feminist science studies and visual culture. She
edited The Encyclopedia of Reproductive Technologies and co-edited (with
Susan Lord).
Ric N. Caric is a professor of international and interdisciplinary studies
at Morehead State University in Kentucky. His social theory and American
history articles have appeared in Philosophy in the Contemporary World,
Pennsylvania History, and other journals. Caric is finishing a book on
popular culture in antebellum Philadelphia, and his political commentary
can be found at his "Red State Impressions" blog.
Lisa Forman Cody is an associate professor of history and associate dean of
the Faculty of History at Claremont McKenna College in Los Angeles. She is
the author of Birthing the Nation: Sex, Science, and the Conception of
Eighteenth-Century Britons (2005), which won the Berkshire Conference of
Women Historians Best First Book of the Year Prize, the Phi Alpha Theta
Best First Book Prize, and the Western Association of Women Historians
Frances Keller Richardson-Sierra Prize. She is working on two books
tentatively entitled Divided We Stand: Divorce and Sexual Scandal in the
Age of the American Revolution and Imaginary Values: Health, Wealth, and
Human Labor in the British Imperial imagination, 1660-1840.
Jenny Ellison recently received her doctorate in history from York
University in Toronto. Her research on the fat-acceptance movement has
appeared in the Fat Studies Reader (2009) as well as the Journal of the
Canadian Historical Association. Her current research examines self-esteem
as a women's health issue.
Lisa Featherstone is a lecturer in Australian history at the University of
Newcastle, Australia. She has published in gender history, medical history,
and the history of sexuality, and is currently writing a book entitled
Let's Talk about Sex: Histories of Sexuality in Australia from Federation
to the Pill, to be published by Cambridge Scholars Publishing in 2011.
Kirsten E. Gardner is an associate professor of history and women's studies
at the University of Texas at San Antonio. She is the author of Early
Detection: Women, Cancer, and Awareness Campaigns in Twentieth-Century
United States.
Mandy Hadenko is a doctoral candidate in the Department of History, York
University, Toronto. Her dissertation is entitled "Cervical Cancer and the
Canadian Woman: Provincial Roles in Cancer Prevention."
Heather Molyneaux recently received her doctorate in history from the
University of New Brunswick. Her dissertation examines the representation
of women in the Canadian Medical Association Journal pharmaceutical
advertisements. She has published in Acadiensis and has an article
co-written with Linda Kealey in the Journal of Canadian Studies.
Heather Murray is an assistant professor in the Department of History,
University of Ottawa. Her monograph, Not in This Family: Gays and Their
Parents in North America, 1945-1990s, was published in 2010 by the
University of Pennsylvania Press.
Christabelle Sethna is an associate professor at the Institute of Women's
Studies and Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Ottawa. She has
published numerous articles on sex education, contraception, and abortion
history. She has completed a SSHRC-funded study on the impact of the birth
control pill on single Canadian women between 1960 and 1980. She is
currently working on another SSHRC-funded research project on the travel
that Canadian women undertake to access abortion services, past and
present.
Sharra L. Vostral is an associate professor, holding a joint appointment in
the Department of Gender and Women's Studies and the Department of History
at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. Her book, Under Wraps: A
History of Menstrual Hygiene Technology (2008), examines the social and
technological history of sanitary napkins and tampons, and the efforts to
hide menstruation and menstrual artifacts, as well as the effects of
technology upon women's experiences of menstruation. She co-edited
Feminist Technology (2010), which explores feminist methods, theories,
politics, and interventions in the design of artifacts. Her current
research is a history of toxic shock syndrome and its relationship to
tampon use during the early 1980s.
Cheryl Krasnick Warsh is a professor of history at Vancouver Island
University in Nanaimo, British Columbia. Her publications include
Prescribed Norms: Women and Health in Canada and the U.S. since 1800;
Moments of Unreason: The Practice of Canadian Psychiatry and the Homewood
Retreat, 1883-1923; and Consuming Modernity: Gendered Behaviour and
Consumerism before the Baby Boom.