Metadata
Title
Centre for Medical Humanities (CMH)
Category
graduate
UUID
0bfbe18e4a3b4cbf9dbcb6aca863d3d3
Source URL
https://www.brookes.ac.uk/research/units/hss/centres/centre-for-medical-humaniti...
Parent URL
https://www.brookes.ac.uk/research/research-centres
Crawl Time
2026-03-19T05:02:59+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

Centre for Medical Humanities (CMH)

Source: https://www.brookes.ac.uk/research/units/hss/centres/centre-for-medical-humanities Parent: https://www.brookes.ac.uk/research/research-centres

Director(s): Professor Marius Turda

Contact:

mturda@brookes.ac.uk

+44 (0)18653698

About us

The Centre for Medical Humanities (CMH) was established in late 2014/early 2015.

First and foremost, it aims to promote world-leading interdisciplinary research and actively engage with new academic and non-academic audiences.

Second, it strives to encourage a fresh collaborative partnership across the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences and the University more broadly.

Third, it brings together historians of medicine and scholars with interests in medical humanities from History, Philosophy, Social and Life Sciences as well as Anthropology and Religion. Finally, it seeks to explore new opportunities for extending its current academic network and establish new ones.

CMH also hosts the Working Group on the History of Race and Eugenics, established in 2006, and it provides editorship for the CEU Studies in the History of Medicine, established in 2011.

Professor Turda curates the public history project on the legacies of eugenics: Confront Eugenics.

Part of

Leadership

Professor Marius Turda

Professor in 20th Century Central and Eastern European Biomedicine

View profile for Marius Turda

Groups

History of Race and Eugenics (HRE)

Eugenic Iconographies and the Public Imagination

Professor Marius Turda explores the history and impact of the eugenics movement. He delves into the origins of eugenics, its rise to prominence, and its influence on social and health policies worldwide. The work highlights the visual and public iconographies used to promote eugenic ideologies, examining their role in shaping societal attitudes and reinforcing discriminatory practices. Through this digital exhibition, the text invites reflection on the legacy of eugenics and its ongoing implications in contemporary debates about genetics and human rights.

Download flipbook

Podcasts

The Centre produced a range of podcast over time on diverse topics linked to Medical Humanities.  Latest podcasts include:

See full list in Radar

Subscribe at the Apple iTunes Store

Subscribe to the RSS feed

Subscribe to the Atom feed

Library special collections on public and allied health

Oxford Brookes curates unique collections for teaching and research. For more information, please visit the Library Special Collections page.

Dorset House Archive

Medical Sciences Video Archive

Sally Croft Collection

The Welfare Collection

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