Stories
- Article
The sickness in the wellness industry
In recovery from anorexia, Gwen Smith began to realise how the wellness industry needs its followers to feel bad about themselves in order to make money out them.
- Article
Disturbed minds and disruptive bodies
Prison officers tried to regulate women’s minds and bodies and maintain a new disciplinary routine in the second half of the 1800s.
Catalogue
- Books
- Online
Twelfth annual report of the managers of the New-York Asylum for Lying-in Women : presented March 12, 1835.
New-York Asylum for Lying-in Women.Date: 1835- Books
- Online
Report of Columbia Hospital for Women and Lying-in Asylum, Washington, D.C. / by J. Harry Thompson.
Thompson, J. Harry.Date: 1873- Pictures
- Online
Asylum for Lying-in-Women. Coloured wood engraving.
Reference: 18457i- Books
- Online
Biographical sketch of J. Kearny Rodgers, M.D : fellow of the College of Physicians and Surgeons of the University of the State of New York, and one of its trustees, surgeon to the New York Hospital and New York Eye Infirmary, consulting surgeon of the New York Lying-In Asylum, of the Institution for the Blind, and of the Emigrants' Hospital, formerly president of the N.Y. County Medical Society, and Vice-President of the Academy of Medicine, and honorary member of the New York Pathological Society / by Edward Delafield.
Delafield, Edward, 1794-1875.Date: 1852- Books
- Online
Twenty-second annual report of the Columbia Hospital for Women and Lying-In Asylum for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1888 / P.J. Murphy.
Columbia Hospital for Women (Washington, D.C.)Date: 1888