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|CONTACT: Joseph M. Gabriel
(850) 645-8151
joseph.gabriel@med.fsu.edu
By Barry Ray
March 2009PROFESSOR HONORED FOR RESEARCH ON
HISTORY OF ADDICTION IN AMERICA
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. -- A Florida State University historian who
specializes in the history of medicine, cultural history and
intellectual history has received a major award given to young
scholars in his field.
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Joseph Gabriel Ph.D. |
Joseph M. Gabriel, an assistant professor in Florida State’s
College of Medicine and a courtesy
professor in the Department of History, has received the Jack D.
Pressman-Burroughs Wellcome Award from the
American Association for
the History of Medicine. The association is North
America’s oldest continuously functioning scholarly organization
devoted to the study of all aspects of the history of the health
professions, disease, public health and related subjects.
Gabriel was honored for his scholarly project “Gods and Monsters:
Drug Addiction and the Origins of Modern America.”
In its award citation, the association stated in part that Gabriel
“sets out to trace what it means to be addicted in the United
States. Through graceful writing and powerful research, he
incorporates intimate aspects of personal experience alongside
piercing analysis of the central role of addictive substances in
American military, medical, and commercial life. Gabriel’s
manuscript argues that the physical experience of use of strong
substances is a product not simply of social constraints but also of
market forces and political anxieties.”
The award and a stipend of $1,000 are given yearly for outstanding
work in 20th-century history of medicine or medical science, as
demonstrated by the completion of a Ph.D. and a proposal to turn the
dissertation into a publishable monograph.
For his part, Gabriel described himself as “both honored and humbled
to be given this award. It’s really exciting for me to be recognized
by my peers in this way. Jack Pressman was a wonderful historian,
and I’ll do my best to live up to his legacy.”
Pressman was a distinguished historian of medicine and an associate
professor of the history of the health sciences at the University of
California, San Francisco until his death in 1997.
“Joe Gabriel brings a wonderful perspective to our young College of
Medicine’s students and faculty,” said Myra Hurt, the college’s
senior associate dean for research and graduate programs and a professor of
biomedical sciences. “His interests and his colleagues in the area
of the history of medicine have enlivened the college’s ‘Grand
Rounds’ seminar series and the medical education courses in which he
participates. He is a bright young colleague whose development is
exciting to watch!”
Gabriel received his Ph.D. in history from Rutgers University in
2006. His dissertation was titled “Gods and Monsters: Drugs,
Addiction, and the Origins of Narcotic Control in the
Nineteenth-Century Urban North.” In it, Gabriel argues that the
feeling of “loss of control” that is at the heart of the addictive
experience grew out of complicated changes in the culture and
economy of the 19th century, and that the emergence of this type of
individual experience was fundamentally intertwined with the origins
of narcotic control as both a scientific and political project.
Among other topics, Gabriel is interested in the changing experience
of health and illness, the history of medicine and psychiatry, the
history of pharmacy and pharmaceuticals, cultural history, the
history of technology, and the history of pragmatism and
neo-pragmatism.
He will be presented with the Jack D. Pressman-Burroughs Wellcome
Award at the 2009 meeting of the American Association for the
History of Medicine, which is scheduled to be held in Cleveland on
April 23-26.
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