HNUH228R

The Picture of Health and Illness: Modern Medicine in Illustration

From prehistoric carvings, through King Tut's burial mask and Michelangelo's David, to the Lincoln Memorial and Body Worlds, images have long been used to communicate what people can and should be. After the "Scientific Revolution" in Europe, when identity was increasingly tied to biology, medical illustrations communicated theories of the ideal body and how it should, and should not, look. Doctors working in the midst of scientific revolution unequivocally tied health to race, gender, and sexuality by enlisting engravers, photographers, and printers to depict the healthy body as a European man and all others as weak, flawed, or ill. This course takes up questions about science, illustration, and identity. Can science tell us who we really are? Do pictures reveal the truth about our bodies? In this class, students will develop their own theory of how science continues to shape who we think we can be and how we might resist those limitations.

Sister Courses: HNUH228A, HNUH228B, HNUH228C, HNUH228O, HNUH228Q, HNUH228U, HNUH228V, HNUH228W, HNUH228Y, HNUH228Z

Spring 2026

6 reviews
Average rating: 4.83

Fall 2025

6 reviews
Average rating: 4.83

Spring 2025

6 reviews
Average rating: 4.83

Past Semesters

6 reviews
Average rating: 4.83

During the Spring 2020 and Spring 2021 semesters, students could choose to take some of their courses pass-fail mid-semester which skews grade data aggregated across multiple semesters.

Average GPA of 3.94 between 80 students*

HNUH228R Grade Distribution+-05101520253035404550556065707580859095100% of studentsABCDFWother
A: 86.25%
A+: 11.25%
B+: 1.25%
W: 1.25%
* "W"s are considered to be 0.0 quality points. "Other" grades are not factored into GPA calculation. Grade data not guaranteed to be correct.