Select Bibliography

Anderson, Laurie Halse. Fever 1793. New York: Simon and Schuster, 2002.

Anstey, Christopher. Ode to Jenner; to which is added, a compendium of vaccination consisting of two tables; one shewing the advantages of vaccine inoculation the other containing instructions for the practice. London, 1804.

Arthur, Brian. The Nature of Technology: What It Is and How It Evolves. New York: Free Press, 2009.

Bache, Franklin. “Small Pox and Vaccination.” Philadelphia, 1823.

Bellion, Wendy. Citizen Spectator. Art, Illusion, and Visual Perception in Early National America. Chapel Hill: University of North Caroline Press, 2011.

Bennett, Michael. “Smallpox and Cowpox under the Southern Cross: The Smallpox Epidemic of 1789 and the Advent of Vaccination in Colonial Australia.” Bulletin of the History of Medicine 83.1 (2009): 37-62.

Birch’s Views of Philadelphia. Philadelphia: Free Library of Philadelphia, 2000.

Blair, William. The vaccine contest…being an exact outline of the arguments…adduced by…both sides, respecting cow-pox inoculation. London, 1806.

Bloomfield, Robert. Good tidings; or, News from the farm. London, 1804.

Coxe, John Redman. Practical Observations on Vaccination Or Inoculation for the Cow-pock. Philadelphia, 1802.

Delancey, Dayle. “Vaccinating Freedom: Smallpox Prevention and the Discourses of African American Freedom in Antebellum Philadelphia.” Journal of African American History 95 (2010): 296-321.

Dunning, Richard. Minutes of some experiments to ascertain the permanent security of vaccination, against exposure to the small-pox. Plymouth, 1804.

Feeney, Joseph. “Modernized by 1800: The Portrait of Urban America, Especially Philadelphia, in the Novels of Charles Brockden Brown.” American Studies 23.2 (1982): 25-38.  

Fenn, Elizabeth. Pox Americana: The Great Smallpox Epidemic of 1775-1782. New York: Hill and Wang, 2001.

Fields, Rebecca Green. “‘Simple, Easy, and Intelligible’: Republican Political Ideology and the Implementation of Vaccination in the Early Republic.” Early American Studies 12.2 (Spring 2014): 301-337.

Finger, Simon. The Contagious City. The Politics of Public Health in Early Philadelphia. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2012.

Fisher, Matthew, and J. Moses, Rousing the Mobile Herd: Apps that Encourage Real Space Engagement. In Museums and the Web 2013, N. Proctor & R. Cherry (eds). Silver Spring, MD: Museums and the Web,  2013.

Golden, Janet. “Medical History in Other Venues: Theater, Festivals, Blogs, Digital Games, and More.” AAHM Annual Meeting, Chicago, May 2014.

Gronim, Sara. “Imagining Inoculation: Smallpox, the Body, and Social Relations of Healing in the Eighteenth Century.” Bulletin of the History of Medicine 80.2 (2006): 247-268.

Gross, CP, Septkowitz, KA. “The myth of the medical breakthrough: smallpox, vaccination, and Jenner reconsidered.” International Journal of Infectious Diseases, 3.1 (1998): 53-60.

Holmes, Richard. The Age of Wonder. New York: Random House, 2009.

Hughes, Thomas. Human Built World. How to Think about Technology and Culture. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2004.

Jenner, Edward. An Inquiry into the Causes and Effects of the Variolae Vaccinae, a Disease discovered in some of the Western Counties of England, particularly Gloucestershire, and known by the name of the Cow-Pox. London, 1801.

Kerber, Linda. Women of the Republic: Intellect and Ideology in Revolutionary America. Chapel Hill: University of North Caroline Press, 1980.

Klepp, Susan. “The Swift Progress of Population”: A Documentary and Bibliographic Study of Philadelphia’s Growth, 1642-1859. Philadelphia: American Philosophical Society, 1991.

Lipscomb, George . A dissertation on the failure and mischiefs of the disease called the cow-pox in which the principal arguments adduced in favour of vaccination by Drs. Jenner [et al.] are examined, and confuted. London, 1805.

Meyers, Amy, and Lisa Ford. Knowing Nature: Art and Science in Philadelphia, 1740-1840. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2012.

Montague, Lady Mary Wortley. Selected Letters. New York, 1997.

Nash, Margaret. “Rethinking Republican Motherhood: Benjamin Rush and the Young Ladies’ Academy of Philadelphia.” Journal of the Early Republic 17 (1997): 171-191.

Newman, Richard. Freedom’s Prophet: Richard Allen, the AME Church, and the Black Founding Fathers. New York: New York University Press, 2008.

Newman, Simon. Embodied History: The Lives of the Poor in Early Philadelphia. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2003.

Peck, Robert McCraken, Patricia Stroud, and Rosamund Purcell. A Glorious Enterprise: The Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia and the Making of American Science. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2012.

Porter, Roy. “The Patient’s View: Doing Medical History from Below.” Theory and Society 14.2 (1985): 175-198.

Prospect of Philadelphia and City Directory, 1795.

Ramirez, Paul. “‘Like Herod’s Massacre’: Quarantines, Bourbon Reform, and Popular Protest in Oaxaca’s Smallpox Epidemic, 1796-7.” The Americas 69.2 (2012): 203-235.

Riley, James. “Smallpox and American Indians Revisited.” Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences 65.4 (2010): 445-477.

Rollo, John. Medical report of cases of inoculation and re-inoculation with variolous and vaccine matter. London, 1804.

Rosner, Lisa. “Thistle on the Delaware: Edinburgh Medical Education and Philadelphia Practice 1800-1825.” Social History of Medicine 5 (1992): 19-42.

Rosner, Lisa. Vaccination and Its Critics. Forthcoming, ABC-Clio, 2016.

Rosner, Lisa. “What’s in a game? A survey of digital game opportunities for historians of medicine,” Bulletin of the History of Medicine 89 (2015): 324-329.

Rusnock, Andrea. “Catching Cowpox: The Early Spread of Smallpox Vaccination, 1798-1810.” Bulletin of the History of Medicine 83.1 (2009): 17-36.

Schaller, David. “From Knowledge to Narrative – to Systems? Games, Rules and Meaning-making.” In J. Trant and D. Bearman (eds). Museums and the Web 2011: Proceedings. Toronto: Archives & Museum Informatics, 2011.

Schell, Jesse. The Art of Game Design. A Book of Lenses. New York: Morgan Kaufmann, 2008.

Schillace, Brandi. Review of “Pox and the City”. Bull. of the History of Medicine (under review).

Schofield, Robert E. “The Science Education of an Enlightened Entrepreneur. Charles Willson Peale and His Philadelphia Museum, 1784-1827.” American Studies 32 (1989): 21-40.

Scofield, Samuel. A Practical Treatise on Vaccina or Cow-pock. New York, 1810.

Scofield, Samuel. An Inaugural Dissertation on the Nature and Origin of Vacinna, or Cow-pock. New York, 1803.

Sellers, Charles Coleman. Mr. Peale’s Museum. Charles Willson Peale and the First Popular Museum of Natural Science and Art. New York: Norton, 1980.

Sköld, Peter, “From Inoculation to Vaccination: Smallpox in Sweden in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries.” Population Studies 50.2 (1996): 247-262.

Small Pox Destroys, Vaccination Saves, the Lives of Thousands. Philadelphia, 1806.

Trépanier, Nicolas. “The Assassins' Perspective:Teaching History with Video Games,” AHA Perspectives, May 2015.

Views in Philadelphia and Its Vicinity: Engraved from Original Drawings. Philadelphia, 1827.

Weaver, Karol Kovalovich. “The Enslaved Healers of Eighteenth Century Saint Domingue.” Bulletin of the History of Medicine 76.3 (2002): 429-460.

Willrich, Michael. Pox: An American History. New York: Penguin, 2012.

Willson, Joseph. The Elite of Our People: Joseph Willson's Sketches of Black Upper-Class Life in Antebellum Philadelphia. Edited by Julie Winch. State College, PA: Pennsylvania State University Press, 2000.

Yamin, Rebecca. Digging in the City of Brotherly Love. Stories from Philadelphia Archaeology. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2008.

Youngdahl, Karie. “Testing a Smallpox Digital Game.” History of Vaccines Blog, 2013, http://www.historyofvaccines.org/content/blog/testing-smallpox-digital-game