Matches in Library of Congress for { <http://lccn.loc.gov/2012010855> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 26 of
26
with 100 items per page.
- 2012010855 contributor B12439554.
- 2012010855 created "c2012.".
- 2012010855 date "2012".
- 2012010855 date "c2012.".
- 2012010855 dateCopyrighted "c2012.".
- 2012010855 description "Includes bibliographical references and index.".
- 2012010855 description "When the slaves got sick : antebellum medical practice -- Sickness rages fearfully among them : a wartime medical crisis and its implications -- We have come out like men : African American military medical care -- We have come to a conclusion to bind ourselves together : African American associations and medical care -- No license; nor no deplomer : regulating private medical practice and public space -- By nature specially fitted for the care of the sufferer : black doctors, nurses, and patients after the war.".
- 2012010855 extent "p. ;".
- 2012010855 identifier "9780807835838 (cloth : alk. paper)".
- 2012010855 isPartOf "John Hope Franklin series in African American history and culture".
- 2012010855 isPartOf "John Hope Franklin series in African American history and culture.".
- 2012010855 issued "2012".
- 2012010855 issued "c2012.".
- 2012010855 language "eng".
- 2012010855 publisher "Chapel Hill : University of North Carolina Press,".
- 2012010855 spatial "United States.".
- 2012010855 subject "362.108996/073 23".
- 2012010855 subject "African Americans history United States.".
- 2012010855 subject "Delivery of Health Care history United States.".
- 2012010855 subject "History, 19th Century United States.".
- 2012010855 subject "History, 20th Century United States.".
- 2012010855 subject "Physicians history United States.".
- 2012010855 subject "WZ 80.5.B5".
- 2012010855 tableOfContents "When the slaves got sick : antebellum medical practice -- Sickness rages fearfully among them : a wartime medical crisis and its implications -- We have come out like men : African American military medical care -- We have come to a conclusion to bind ourselves together : African American associations and medical care -- No license; nor no deplomer : regulating private medical practice and public space -- By nature specially fitted for the care of the sufferer : black doctors, nurses, and patients after the war.".
- 2012010855 title "Doctoring freedom : the politics of African American medical care in slavery and emancipation / by Gretchen Long.".
- 2012010855 type "text".