Loading…
2026 AAHM + AAHN Annual Meeting
Venue: Ellicott Room clear filter
arrow_back View All Dates
Saturday, June 6
 

10:15am EDT

E5. Sexual Knowledge, Medical Power: Reframing the History of Sexology
Saturday June 6, 2026 10:15am - 11:45am EDT
Sexology, beginning with Heinrich Kaan’s Psychopathia Sexualis in 1844, has presented itself as a rigorous and objective science while simultaneously addressing medical and health concerns, often seeking to apply findings for clinical and therapeutic ends. Tensions over whether sexology has been descriptive or therapeutic, neutral or activist, and normalizing or pathologizing partly reflect these tensions between scientific origins and medical applications. 


This disciplinary duality has also shaped the historiography of sexology. This history has developed largely through science and technology studies (STS), the history of sexuality, and the history of science. While these approaches have been fruitful, the contributions of historians of medicine to the history of sexology have been less clearly defined. Given the medical backgrounds of many sexologists, medical questions and applications, and the significance of sex therapy and sexual medicine, medical histories of the discipline are necessary. Some recent histories of transgender medicine, psychiatry, and fertility have shown possibilities of medical histories of sexology, but there is much more to be explored.

This roundtable brings together historians engaged in research into the history of sexology and the sexual sciences to think through the benefits and limitations of a “history of medicine” approach to sexology. Sophia DeLeonibus considers how intersections between sexology, psychoanalysis, and psychiatry informed the making of the category of “gender identity” in the mid-20th century US. Donna Drucker considers the role of technology in defining sexology as medical practice. Kirsten Leng examines the role of female sexologists in early-20th century Germany, and the ways in which their work entangled medical and scientific knowledge with desires for social change. Ezra Gerard’s research investigates how medicalized understandings of childhood development were central to sexologists’ constructions of homosexuality. Rachel Louise Moran (speaker/moderator) examines “female sexual dysfunction” in the mid-20th century US, and tensions between psychiatric and physiological solutions. Sohini Mukhopadhyay explores the great diversity of the “unruly appropriations” of Euro-American sexology in turn-of-the-century Bengal, including the role of doctors. 

Chair email: [email protected]

Moderators
RL

Rachel Louise Moran

Professor of History, Texas A&M University
Speakers
DD

Donna Drucker

Columbia University
EG

Ezra Gerard

Independent Scholar

KL

Kirsten Leng

Department of Women, Gender, Sexuality Studies, University of Massachusetts Amherst
SD

Sophia DeLeonibus

Yale University


avatar for Sohini Mukhopadhyay

Sohini Mukhopadhyay

PhD candidate, University of Illinois At Chicago
Saturday June 6, 2026 10:15am - 11:45am EDT
Ellicott Room Hyatt, Floor 2

1:00pm EDT

F5. Historian-Clinician Engagement
Saturday June 6, 2026 1:00pm - 2:30pm EDT
While their perspectives may differ, both clinicians and medical historians share a common interest in the history of health care. The premise, therefore, of this roundtable is that historians and clinicians have much to offer each other in both theory and practice. This is particularly true at a time when medical history is occupying an ever more precarious place in the medical school curriculum. Further, while dated stereotypes about Whiggism and presentism persist, the clinician population is changing as are its historical interests. The possibilities for new areas of collaboration are expanding.

Growing out of an ad hoc committee on clinician engagement, this roundtable will explore practical strategies for expanding historian-clinician engagement. This roundtable will facilitate discussion between clinicians and historians, and generate additional ideas that can be applied at the institutional and local level.
  • Shelley McKellar PhD will draw on her experience teaching medical students and residents, who are seeking venues and communities for avocational clinicians interested in the history of medicine
  • Mindy Schwartz MD will discuss the Clio Project and the development of an online community to support medical history
  • Justin Barr MD, PhD will provide insights into publishing history in medical journals from his perspective as both an author and the history editor for Annals of Surgery Open
  • Peter Kernahan MD, PhD will discuss historical initiatives at the American College of Surgeons 
  • Julie Lemmon MD will comment on historian-clinician interaction from the perspective of a clinician completing a master’s degree in the history of medicine 
  • David Korostyshevsky PhD will discuss his experience researching, writing, and producing a departmental history while a graduate student
Chair emails:
[email protected]
[email protected]

Learning Outcomes
  • To understand historical activities in the clinician community
  • To recognize the mutual benefits of collaboration between historians and clinicians
  • To develop initiatives for integrating history into the medical curriculum

Moderators
WO

Walton O. Schalick, III

University of Wisconsin - Madison
Speakers
JB

Justin Barr

Ochsner Clinic

PK

Peter Kernahan

University of Minnesota

SM

Shelley McKellar

Western University

avatar for David Korostyshevsky

David Korostyshevsky

Faculty, Colorado State University
I am an interdisciplinary historian studying addiction, gender, and the family at the nexus of medicine and law. My research interests also include life insurance medicine and the formation of enduring disparities in modern healthcare systems. I am an Instructor in the Department... Read More →
avatar for Julie Lemmon

Julie Lemmon

Johns Hopkins University

MS

Mindy Schwartz

University of Chicago Medicine

Saturday June 6, 2026 1:00pm - 2:30pm EDT
Ellicott Room Hyatt, Floor 2

3:45pm EDT

G5. Thinking with Southeast Asia
Saturday June 6, 2026 3:45pm - 5:15pm EDT
This roundtable brings together a group of scholars to discuss the possibilities for future directions in the history of medicine from the vantage of Southeast Asia. As a place of tremendous cultural and ecological diversity, shaped by the collision of different colonizing and decolonizing projects, Southeast Asia focuses our attention on those cross-cultural circulations of knowledge and transnational networks of expertise that shaped the everyday experiences of medicine, health and caregiving across the region and beyond. Indeed, we argue that this region, which remains "peripheral" to scholarship on the history of medicine, was never just "out there" but was instead a constitutive feature of the global development of medicine and public health. The four panelists will offer vignettes from their current projects. Anh Le (Assistant Professor, Muhlenberg College) will speak about how connections across diasporic Chinese communities in Southeast Asia reshaped the meaning and practice of traditional Chinese medicine in colonial Vietnam. Thuy Linh Nguyen (Associate Professor, Mount Saint Mary College) will discuss the health impacts of the colonial mining industry amidst the intensification of colonial capitalism and ecological degradation in Vietnam’s northern borderlands with China. Claire Edington (Associate Professor, University of California - San Diego) will discuss how we might use archival sources to recover the experiences of drug users and their families in Vietnam across the twentieth century. Michitake Aso (University at Albany - SUNY) will talk about the public health response to Agent Orange during and after the Vietnam War as a way to reframe our understanding of the relationship of medical science and postwar politics. This discussion will showcase how the history of medicine in Southeast Asia offers valuable conceptual frames for widening our field of vision, both within HOM and Southeast Asian Studies. 

Chair email: [email protected]

Learning Outcomes
  • To deepen understanding of the importance of Southeast Asia to the global history of medicine and public health
  • To think with Southeast Asia as a generative site for exploring new themes and methodologies in the history of medicine
  • To reflect more generally on the relationship between area studies and the history of medicine, and to chart out future steps for collaboration across fields.

Moderators
CE

Claire Edington

University of California, San Diego

Speakers
MA

Michitake Aso

University at Albany, SUNY

AL

Anh Le

Muhlenberg College

TL

Thuy Linh Nguyen

Mount Saint Mary College

Saturday June 6, 2026 3:45pm - 5:15pm EDT
Ellicott Room Hyatt, Floor 2
 
2026 AAHM + AAHN Annual Meeting
Register to attend
Share Modal

Share this link via

Or copy link

Filter sessions
Apply filters to sessions.
Filtered by Date -