Reading for day one:
Carr, E.H. (1964). What is History? Excerpt in: Tosh, J. Historians on History. Harlow: Pearson-Longman 2009, pp. 54-59.
Duffin. J. (2004). Lovers and Livers. Disease Concepts in History. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, pp. 1-36.
King, L. (1982). Medical Thinking. A Historical Preface. Princeton: Princeton University Press, pp. 5-15.
Brandt, A. M., & Gardner, M. (2000). The golden age of Medicine? In R. Cooter & J. Pickstone (Eds.), Companion to Medicine i the Twentieth Century (pp. 21-37). London and New York: Routledge.
Reading for day two:
Barnes, D. S. (2010). Targeting Patient Zero In F. Condrau & M. Worboys (Eds.), Tuberculosis then and now: Perspectives on the History of an Infectious Disease (pp. 49-71). Montreal: McGill-Queens University Press.
Condrau, F. (2010). Beyond the total institution: Towards a Re-Interpretation of the Tuberculosis Sanatorium. In F. Condrau & M. Worboys (Eds.), Tuberculosis then and now: Perspectives on the History of an Infectious Disease (pp. 49-71). Montreal: McGill-Queens University Press.
Johnston, W. D. (1994). Tuberculosis. In K. F. Kiple (Ed.), The Cambridge World History of Human Disease (pp. 1059-1068). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Koch, R. (1882). The aetiology of tuberculosis. In: Carter, K. C. (Ed.). (1987). Essays of Robert Koch. Translated by K. Codell Carter. New York: Greenwood Press.
Suggested additional reading:
Dubos, R. J., Dubos, J. The white plague: tuberculosis, man, and society. (New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press 1987).
Jan Golinski, Making Natural Knowledge. Constructivism and the History of Science (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1998).
Frank Huisman, and John Harley Warner, eds., Locating Medical History. The Stories and Their Meanings (Baltimore and London: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2004).
John V. Pickstone, Ways of Knowing: A New History of Science, Technology and Medicine (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2000).
Roy Porter, ed. The Cambridge History of Medicine (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2006).
Charles E. Rosenberg, and Janet Golden, eds., Framing Disease: Studies in Cultural History (New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, 1992).