Podcast appearances and mentions of Kathleen M Brown

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  • ?INFREQUENT EPISODES
  • Oct 29, 2024LATEST

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Latest podcast episodes about Kathleen M Brown

Hard to Believe
#037 – What really happened at Salem - with Kathleen M. Brown

Hard to Believe

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 29, 2024 66:12


The Salem Witch Trials may well be the single most notorious and iconic event of America's colonial period. Every Halloween, Salem, Massachusetts, hosts untold thousands of tourists who revel in the city's occult history and reputation as America's haunted capital of spookiness. But as well-known as the Salem Witch Trials are, they remain a hotbed of historical inaccuracy and misconception. So what exactly happened? How did a sleepy, growing Massachusetts town become the epicenter of witch hysteria? Did everyone go insane, or were the Salem Witch Trials perfectly consistent with the worldview of Salem's citizens. To help us clear this up, Kelly and John asked University of Pennsylvania history professor Kathleen M. Brown for her insights. Brown is a historian of gender and race in early America and the Atlantic World. Educated at Wesleyan University and the University of Wisconsin, Madison, she is author of Good Wives, Nasty Wenches, and Anxious Patriarchs: Gender, Race, and Power in Colonial Virginia (Chapel Hill, 1996), which won the Dunning Prize of the American Historical Association. Her latest, Undoing Slavery: Bodies, Race, and Rights in the Age of Abolition, was published in 2023.  

AMERICA OUT LOUD PODCAST NETWORK
Kathleen M. Brown, MD – Is Cash King for Medical Care?

AMERICA OUT LOUD PODCAST NETWORK

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2022 58:57


America Out Loud PULSE with Dr. Marilyn Singleton – What is a patient to do to save money while still getting good medical care? When patients choose to receive care from a physician or other healthcare professional who has a cash-based practice, the fees can be very low. Why? They have cut out the middleman — the insurer. That means no salary for...

medical care kathleen m brown
America Out Loud PULSE
Kathleen M. Brown, MD – Is Cash King for Medical Care?

America Out Loud PULSE

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2022 58:57


America Out Loud PULSE with Dr. Marilyn Singleton – What is a patient to do to save money while still getting good medical care? When patients choose to receive care from a physician or other healthcare professional who has a cash-based practice, the fees can be very low. Why? They have cut out the middleman — the insurer. That means no salary for...

medical care kathleen m brown
Salón de Moda
Moda y prostitución

Salón de Moda

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 5, 2021 19:42


La moda como espejo de la sociedad nos refleja lo que ocurre en un momento social específico. Muchas personas verán las influencias más inocentes, pero la moda refleja también la moralidad, el escándalo y sobre todo el sexo que tanto ha definido el lugar social de las mujeres desde tiempos inmemoriales. Lo han llamado el oficio más antiguo del mundo y todavía resulta un tema tabú aunque el arte y películas desde Mujer bonita hasta American Gigolo lo hayan visibilizado un poco más. Desde Holly Golightly hasta Olympia, el valor estético del trabajo sexual ha sido una parte importante de las tendencias de moda para escandalizar, estilizar y desafortunadamente nunca para discutir de fondo las consecuencias que el sexo como labor han tenido sobre nuestra colectividad. Referencias: Blake Edwards, dir. Diamantes para el desayuno [Breakfast at Tiffany's]. 1961. Cesare Vecellio. De gli habiti antichi et moderni di diversi parti del mondo. Venecia: Damiano Zenaro, 1590. Clare Haru Crowston. Credit, Fashion, Sex: Economies of Regard in Old Regime France. Durham: Duke University Press, 2013. Corte Suprema de Justicia de Colombia. Sentencia de 26 de Octubre de 2006. Magistrado Ponente: Alvaro Orlando Perez Pinzón. Proceso número: 25743. Denis Bruna (curaduría), “Tenue correcte exigée. Quand le vêtement fait scandale”, MAD París, 1 de diciembre de 2016 al 23 de abril de 2017, https://madparis.fr/tenue-correcte-exigee-quand-le-vetement-fait-scandale-1511. Elizabeth Alice Clement. Love for Sale: Courting, Treating, and Prostitution in New York City, 1900–1945. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2006. Felipe Guamán Poma de Ayala. El primer nueva crónica y buen gobierno. ​​1615/1616. http://www.kb.dk/permalink/2006/poma/1125/en/text/?open=idp657200. Garry Marshall. Mujer bonita [Pretty Woman]. 1990. Buena Vista Pictures. Itai Doron. “Male prostitution and fashion: Dressed to thrill”, en The Routledge Handbook of Male Sex Work, Culture, and Society, editado por John Geoffrey Scott, Christian Grov y Victor Minichiello, 61–82. Londres: Routledge, 2021. Kathleen M. Brown. Foul Bodies: Cleanliness in Early America. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2009. ​​Martina Barroeta Zalaquett: https://www.instagram.com/fashionerd.cl/.  Paul Schrader. American Gigolo. 1980. Paramount. Roland Barthes, Mark Gottdiener, Karin Boklund-Lagopoulou y Alexandros Ph Lagopoulos. “Semiotics”. En A First Look at Communication Theory, editado por Em Griffin. 1972. Yale Daily News. “Anti-Fashion: Patriarchy necessitates prostitution necessitates fashion”, 20 de abril de 2007, https://yaledailynews.com/blog/2007/04/20/anti-fashion-patriarchy-necessitates-prostitution-necessitates-fashion/. Encuéntranos en: http://culturasdemoda.com/salon-de-moda/ @moda2_0 @culturasdemoda #SalonDeModa Agradecemos a Fair Cardinals (@faircardinals) por la música, a Jhon Jairo Varela Rodríguez por el diseño gráfico y a Maca Rubio por la edición del audio.

Hudson Mohawk Magazine
Reclaiming History Nasty Girls With Dr. Kathleen Brown Final

Hudson Mohawk Magazine

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 14, 2020 10:32


In another segment of Reclaiming History, Lovonia Mallory talks about the word “Nasty” and it gender implications with Dr. Kathleen M. Brown, who is the David Boies Professor of History at the University of Pennsylvania where she is the former Director of the Alice Paul Center for Research on Women, Gender, and Sexuality. She currently serves as the lead historian on the Penn & Slavery Project, a student-led and student-driven research project into the university’s historic complicity in slavery. Her main areas of expertise are colonial America; women, gender and sexuality; North American race and slavery; the Atlantic world; the history of the body and domestic labor; and comparative gender and race history. She has a Ph.D. from the University of Wisconsin. She has written several books including her first book, Good Wives, Nasty Wenches, and Anxious Patriarchs: Gender, Race, and Power in Colonial Virginia (1996), Foul Bodies: Cleanliness in Early America (2009). She was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship for 2016 for her current project, Undoing Slavery: Abolitionist Body Politics and the Argument over Humanity, which is a cultural history of Anglo-American abolition as an early campaign for human rights. She argues that abolitionists strategically expanded the category of the human to embrace enslaved people of African descent but ultimately failed to transcend either gender or nation, inadvertently creating new exclusions for indigenous North Americans and leaving a circumscribed legacy for human rights in the present day. Visit http://pennandslaveryproject.org to find out more about slavery and university system.

The Accad and Koka Report
Ep. 54 How to Jump Ship and Practice Medicine on Your Own Terms, with Dr. Kathleen Brown

The Accad and Koka Report

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 4, 2019 56:06


https://accadandkoka.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/01/Kathleen-M-Brown_009-e1546564184116.jpg ()Kathleen Brown, MD The healthcare system continues  to inflict “https://accadandkoka.com/episode31/ (moral injury)” on physicians, causing burnout, depression, or apathy.  And, built as it is on a mountain of debt, the edifice may also not provide any long term security for those who choose to remain on board.  Yet the prospect of jumping ship may seem daunting to many. Our guest today shares with us her personal story of how she did abandon the titanic and forged for herself a successful path to professional sanity. Kathleen M. Brown, MD, obtained her medical degree from the Eastern Virginia School of Medicine and practiced dermatology and internal medicine for several years in Maryland.  In 1997, she and her family moved to the coast of Oregon to join a multi-specialty group of which she was a partner in the group until mid-2011.  This group was a good fit but the administrative and financial burdens of the system were increasingly taking a toll on her enjoyment of medicine. After passage of the Affordable Care Act in 2010, she saw that continuing to stay within an insurance-contracted system would make her style of medical practice impossible.  In July, 2011, with help from her husband, Jack, she opened a direct pay Dermatology practice with a transparent fee schedule.  Within a month of opening she had a full schedule and a restored sense of professional satisfaction. GUEST: Kathleen Brown, MD.  Email and http://www.oregonderm.com/ (Practice Website) LINKS: Facebook page of the https://www.facebook.com/oregonfmma/ (Oregon Chapter of the Free Market Association). RELATED PODCAST EPISODES: Ep. 10 Free Market Medicine: Ethical, Workable, and Unstoppable Ep. 49. Why Are We Insuring Primary Care? Lee Gross of the DPC Movement WATCH ON YOUTUBE: https://youtu.be/GxO_NF96zSo (Watch the episode) on our YouTube channel Support this podcast