Document Type
Article
Publication Date
7-1-2023
Abstract
For over a millennium, libraries and library workers have advanced the knowledge of human science by building, preserving, and sharing collections and research. Historically, libraries have also aligned their institutional responsibilities to adhere to and support the values and virtues of oppressive and colonial practices. Library history has shown the mistreatments and denials of information access of marginalized groups. The history of libraries in the health and medical sciences reveals how these institutions and their workers have preserved and circulated research studies perpetuating racial science. This commentary highlights how such institutions shape and contribute to racial science in the field of medicine. By exploring the history of medicine through this lens, we examine how such institutions have been complicit in upholding racial science. We explore historical documents and archival collections that have been collected and preserved, particularly records and data of vulnerable groups, to advance the knowledge and understanding of the human body through the ideology of racial science. We argue that health and medical sciences librarians need to critically interrogate the racism in medical libraries and its history and address how health misinformation is common even in scholarly publications.
Publication Source (Journal or Book title)
Journal of the Medical Library Association
First Page
740
Last Page
746
Recommended Citation
Pun, R., Green, P., & Davis, N. (2023). Medical libraries and their complicated past: an exploration of the historical connections between medical collections and racial science. Journal of the Medical Library Association, 111 (3), 740-746. https://doi.org/10.5195/jmla.2023.1728