A Medicine of Their Own: The Stories of American Women Healers introduces students to women's entrance to the medical profession in the nineteenth century through readings in fiction, autobiographical documents, and medical history. Together, literary and historical sources open up a window into women's traditional healing work, the constraints of race and gender that they faced while medicine professionalized, and the remarkable work that women accomplished as agents of social and medical change. This module also provides guidelines and resources for a class writing project, a biography of an early woman doctor, using archival materials and sources from the Changing the Face of Medicine exhibition. The biography project demonstrates the importance of recovery work in women's history and provides students with a hands-on opportunity to gain awareness of audience while crafting prose for a political purpose.
The module consists of six one-hour classes. Each class provides a selection of primary and secondary readings along with suggested class discussion questions designed to draw out main themes among the primary documents and the arguments of the secondary sources. Information about the module's author, suggested use, and academic objectives is available online at About the Module.