Engaging the World on Health Equity Through ReadingMain MenuIntroductionWhy these books?Ailing in Place: Environmental Inequities and Health Disparities in AppalachiaMichele MorroneAmerican Health Crisis: One Hundred Years of Panic, Planning, and PoliticsMartin HalliwellAmerica’s Arab Refugees: Vulnerability and Health on the MarginsMarcia C. InhornBedlam: An Intimate Journey into America's Mental Health CrisisKenneth Paul RosenbergBlack Death at the Golden Gate: The Race to Save America from the Bubonic PlagueDavid K RandallChanging Planet, Changing Health: How the Climate Crisis Threatens Our Health and What We Can Do about ItPaul R. Epstein (Author), Dan Ferber (Author), Jeffrey Sachs (Foreword)CherryNico WalkerDelugeLelia ChattiDying in the City of the Blues: Sickle Cell Anemia and the Politics of Race and HealthKeith WailooA Family History of Illness: Memory as MedicineBrett L. WalkerThe Family Roe: An American StoryJoshua PragerFit to Be Citizens?: Public Health and Race in Los Angeles, 1879-1939Natalia MolinaHaiti: After the EarthquakePaul FarmerHow the Other Half Eats: The Untold Story of Food and Inequality in AmericaPriya Fielding-Singh, PhDMad in America: Bad Science, Bad Medicine, and the Enduring Mistreatment of the Mentally IllRobert WhitakerNot Invisible: A Collection of Poems about Chronic IllnessTiffany MoharPushing Cool: Big Tobacco, Racial Marketing, and the Untold Story of the Menthol CigaretteKeith WailooSince the House is BurningTale of Two PlanetsJohn Freeman (editor)Under the Skin: The Hidden Toll of Racism on American Lives and on the Health of Our NationLinda VillarosaUnwell Women: Misdiagnosis and Myth in a Man-Made WorldElinor CleghornWhat Happens Is NeitherAngela Narciso TorresWhat the Eyes Don't See: A Story of Crisis, Resistance, and Hope in an American CityMona Hanna-AttishaWhich Country Has the World's Best Health Care?Ezekiel J. EmanuelAbout the curatorAcknowledgementsVesper North9c258319e12f98ebd7884dfac94793204ec38858Chapman University
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12023-08-09T17:35:35+00:00Introduction40plain153642023-09-11T21:49:21+00:00 The Engaging the World: Health Equity Bibliography was curated in partnership with Chapman University's Engaging the World series, an annual program leading the conversation on global critical issues (e.g., environmental justice, the significance of race). The texts featured in this exhibit are just a portion of a more extensive bibliography (numbering over 100 resources) comprised of nonfiction, memoir, poetry, and fiction, all seeking to expand the conversation on health equity.
The bibliography can be viewed in three ways: the physical display (pictured left) on the first floor of Leatherby Libraries through the fall semester, the digital display* (where you are currently), or the entire bibliography. You may find the listed texts speak to your experiences or will discover the extensive spread of health inequity across the globe. Some of the books discuss how racism has ingrained itself in the bodies of African Americans–adversely affecting their physical health, a poet who feels her struggle with Lupus has made her invisible, how the mental health care system continues to fail patients with inadequate medicine, or the coverup orchestrated by the U.S. government, who sought to erase their failure in handling a bubonic plague outbreak that killed over 100 people, including Chinese immigrants.
Both Engaging the World and the bibliography seek to promote thoughtful dialogue and mindful reflection beyond the walls of Chapman University. The fight for health equity is ongoing and begins with a conversation.
Featured authors include Linda Villarosa, Suzanne Edison, and Angela Narciso Torres, who will be visiting Chapman this fall. For more information, click here.
What is Engaging the World? Wilkinson College of Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences is committed to leading the conversation in the community on issues of humanity, unity and justice. As such, the college has undertaken semester-long examinations of key societal issues. These interdisciplinary, campus-wide conversations promote thoughtful dialogue; mindful reflection; social tolerance; awareness and respect; peace and kindness. Wilkinson is partnering with Crean College of Health and Behavioral Sciences for the 23-24 series focusing on health equity.
What is health equity?
Health Humanities integrates concepts from the arts, humanities, and social sciences to examine notions of health, well-being, illness, and disability in relation to diverse histories, cultures, perspectives, and communities within and beyond the United States.
Health Equity identifies and challenges the historical, cultural, social, and economic disparities that interfere with access to health and health care.
The global COVID-19 pandemic and its ongoing repercussions have further reinforced the need for Health Humanities to understand the complexity of health not only as medical but also as individual and communal, physical and emotional, historical and political, and cultural and statistical.
Health Equity exists when everyone can attain the highest level of health.
This year’s series aims to promote informed, sustained, and enriching dialogues through an in-depth exploration of what the human condition of health means in our lives.
*The texts featured here are done so with the publisher's permission and include a summary of the text to promote readership and expand the community of health equity scholars. To view the complete list, please see the bibliography.