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2026 AAHM + AAHN Annual Meeting
Venue: Regency Ballroom A clear filter
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Friday, June 5
 

9:30am EDT

A4. Disability and Reproduction in the United States
Friday June 5, 2026 9:30am - 11:00am EDT
1. Miriam Rich, Women’s Reproductive Anxieties and Imaginaries of Disability in the Progressive Era ([email protected])
2. Emma Wathen, “Stop Being a Polio Patient, Be a Mother”: Polio Mothers and Parenting Narratives in the Postwar United States ([email protected])

This panel brings together work from historians who study disability and reproduction in the United States in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Histories of reproduction in the United States have often overlooked disability as an analytical category and disabled people as reproductive agents. In line with disability studies scholarship, the collective work of these historians positions disability as both a discourse that has been used to create and defend racial and gender hierarchies, and a lived experience that shaped the reproductive lives of many women in the United States. Examining the portraits, letters, and memoirs of mothers with and without disabilities, this panel explores how American mothers in different eras contended with (and sometimes countered) ableism, whether through fears about congenital disability or assumptions about the maternal fitness of visibly and publicly disabled women. It calls attention to the ways race, gender, and class intersected with disability. Analyzing the active and intentional demonstration of deafness and motherhood in the portrait of Eliza Clerc, Hull demonstrates the imperative role that d/Deaf women like Clerc had in the creation of American Sign Language, the foundation of the American Deaf community, and the advent of deaf education in the nineteenth-century United States. Turning to the Progressive Era, Miriam Rich explores how lay discourse on reproduction encoded complex and contested imaginaries of congenital disability, becoming a site where diverse women worked out questions and anxieties related to racial descent, gendered family structures, environmental determinants of development, and disabled motherhood. Finally, Emma Wathen investigates how, in the wake of the Salk vaccine, American “polio mothers” called attention to the continuing reproductive needs of polio survivors and reinforced their belonging within the status quo of the white, middle-class nuclear family at a time when women with disabilities were widely deemed to be unfit wives and mothers. Foregrounding disability and disabled people, this panel highlights innovative work from emerging scholars in the fields of disability and reproductive history.

Chair email: [email protected]
Moderators
HM

Hilary Marland

University of Warwick
Speakers
MR

Miriam Rich

University of Texas

avatar for Emma Wathen

Emma Wathen

PhD Candidate, University of Wisconsin-Madison
(she/her) I am a PhD candidate pursuing a joint degree in History and History of Science, Medicine, and Technology at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. I study disability and reproduction in the twentieth-century United States, drawing from the fields of disability studies, U.S... Read More →
Friday June 5, 2026 9:30am - 11:00am EDT
Regency Ballroom A Hyatt, Mezzanine Level

12:30pm EDT

B4. Imperial Health, Colonial Bodies
Friday June 5, 2026 12:30pm - 2:00pm EDT
1. Kristin Brig-Ortiz, Springs and Cemeteries: Urban Public Health, Water Management, and Burial Ground Surveillance in Colonial South Africa, 1880-1910 ([email protected])
2. Kalman Rotstein, The Fear of Premature Burial and the Campaign for Death Certification in Fin-de-Siècle Britain ([email protected])
3. Ogechukwu Williams, Bodies, Blame, and Birth: Historicizing Maternal Mortality Discourses in Nigeria ([email protected])

Chair email: [email protected]
Moderators
NB

Nandini Bhattacharya

Professor of South Asian History and History of Medicine, University of Houston
Historian. Colonial South Asia, pharmaceuticals, alcohol and narcotics, labour and plantations
Speakers
KB

Kristin Brig-Ortiz

Washington University

KR

Kalman Rotstein

Binghamton University
OW

Ogechukwu Williams

Associate Professor, University at Buffalo, SUNY
Friday June 5, 2026 12:30pm - 2:00pm EDT
Regency Ballroom A Hyatt, Mezzanine Level

2:15pm EDT

C4. Institutions of Maternity Care
Friday June 5, 2026 2:15pm - 3:45pm EDT
1. Hilary Marland, ‘Enlarging her capacity as a mother’: Mother and Baby Units and Maternal Mental Illness in Postwar Britain ([email protected])
2. Corey Schultz, Debating Juice: The Controversial History of Fruit Juice in WIC food packages ([email protected])
3. Janet Greenlees, ‘The subject of heated controversy’: maternity care and the unmarried mother in post-World War 1 United States ([email protected])

Chair email: [email protected]
Moderators
ML

Megann Licskai

Yale University
Speakers
CS

Corey Schultz

Graduate Student, University of Rochester


HM

Hilary Marland

University of Warwick
JG

Janet Greenlees

Associate Professor of Health History, Glasgow Caledonian University

Friday June 5, 2026 2:15pm - 3:45pm EDT
Regency Ballroom A Hyatt, Mezzanine Level

4:00pm EDT

D4. Negotiating Norms: Biomedicine in the 20th century
Friday June 5, 2026 4:00pm - 5:15pm EDT
1. Caroline Wechsler, Standardizing syndromes: Clinical scoring systems in genetic connective tissue disorders ([email protected])
2. Sofia Grant, Blocked Impulses: Myasthenia Gravis, the Prostigmin Test, and the Making of a Clinical Diagnosis in Midcentury America ([email protected])
3. Adrien Gau, Of Monolids and Medicine: On the racialization of upper-eyelid blepharoplasty ([email protected])
4. Melody Slavnik-Xu, In the Eye of the Beholder: the Use of Film and Video in the Mackworth Eye-Tracking Devices (1945-1975) ([email protected])

Chair email: [email protected]
Moderators
MS

Mindy Schwartz

University of Chicago Medicine

Speakers
CW

Caroline Wechsler

Graduate Student, University of Pennsylvania

SG

Sofia Grant

Johns Hopkins University
AG

Adrien Gau

University of Pennsylvania
MS

Melody Slavnik-Xu

Graduate Student, Johns Hopkins University
Friday June 5, 2026 4:00pm - 5:15pm EDT
Regency Ballroom A Hyatt, Mezzanine Level
 
2026 AAHM + AAHN Annual Meeting
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