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-Graduate School

-Yale University

Graduate Program in the History of Science & Medicine


Daniel J. Kevles
Program Chair
Hall of Graduate Studies, Room 201, 320 York St
New Haven, CT 06511
Office Phone: 203.432.1356
Email: daniel.kevles@yale.edu

John Harley Warner
Director of Graduate Studies
Sterling Hall of Medicine, L226, 333 Cedar St
New Haven, CT 06510
Office Phone: 203.785.5032
Email: john.warner@yale.edu

Barbara McKay
Graduate Registrar
Hall of Graduate Studies, Room 207, 320 York St
New Haven, CT 06511
Office Phone: 203.432.1365
Email: barbara.mckay@yale.edu

The Historical Medical Library, Yale School of Medicine

Yale University offers a Program in the History of Science and Medicine leading to the M.A., M.Phil., Ph.D., M.D./Ph.D., and J.D./Ph.D. degrees.

The History of Science and Medicine Program is a semi-autonomous graduate track within the Department of History.The Program's students are awarded degrees in History, with a concentration in the History of Science and Medicine. Graduate students in the Program are fully fledged members of the Department. As with the rest of the Department, Program instruction is offered in small classes by the seminar method or some appropriate modification of this approach. Faculty advisers for individual guidance and direction are available throughout the entire period of enrollment. The Program provides many opportunities for professional development in teaching and research. The Program will continue to have an admissions process separate from the rest of the Department of History, and, reflecting the distinctive needs of students in this field, its requirements for graduate degrees will remain somewhat different from the requirements for other History graduate students.

Candidates with top qualifications for graduate study in the History of Science and Medicine come from diverse educational backgrounds, sometimes characterized by study and experience in technical and/or clinical subjects that are not ordinarily part of preparation for graduate study in History.The Program will weigh such qualifications in evaluating applicants.

The Program offers opportunities for students to pursue degrees in concentrations that span the full range of the history of science and history of medicine, from antiquity to modern times. The broad interests of its faculty provide special opportunities to cross the boundaries between these two fields, with emphasis on the biomedical sciences and their connections both with medical practices and the physical sciences.

The Yale Program aims to sustain an integrative, eclectic response to methodological issues that have been intensely debated in recent years. It equips students with a critical appreciation of the diverse approaches now practiced in the history of science and medicine. It offers training in the close reading of texts, instruments, artifacts, and analysis of ideas and practices, and instruction in social, cultural, political and economic modes of interpretation. The Program fosters consideration of the interplay between science and technology as well as between biomedical knowledge and the clinic. It urges students to enrich their professional preparation by drawing on other disciplines including cultural studies, philosophy, and the contemporary natural and social sciences. In all, historiographic pluralism is a hallmark of the Yale Program.

Special advantages offered by the program include library resources that are among the best in North America. The historical medical library contains renowned collections and rare works in the history of medicine and related sciences. The university library system as a whole has exceptional depth in original sources for the history of all the major sciences.

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