HISTSCI 1684: Race, War, and Medicine

Semester: Spring
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Year offered: 2026
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This course explores the historical and contemporary relationship between three prominent pillars of our daily lives: race, war, and medicine. How did each influence the development of the other, and through this process construct modern societies? We will examine the role played by medical practitioners and military personnel in the creation of social and racial hierarchies that in turn abetted the appropriation of land and the extraction of labor. We will begin in the seventeenth century and predominantly track the history of the triumvirate within modern Western imperialist powers, especially the US. Nonetheless, an important priority of the course is to de-center imperial and top-down narratives, and the scholarship we engage with reflects that goal.

Tuesdays and Thursdays at 10:30-11:45 AM with Lecturer Dr. Les Robinson


Leslie-William T. Robinson

Lecturer on the History of Science
Research Interests: History of medicine and the behavioral sciences; History of capitalism; 19th & 20th century US history; Critical military studies; Peace history Les Robinson is a lecturer in the History of Science Department. A historian of the modern...
LWT Robinson