- Detailed table of contents
- Editorial
- Howard Chiang: Historicizing the Emergence of Sexual Freedom: The Medical Knowledge of Psychiatry and the Scientific Power of Sexology, 1880-1920.
- Patricia J.F. Rosof: The Quiet Feminism of Dr. Florence Sabin: Helping Women Achieve in Science and Medicine.
- Hsiao-wen Cheng: Authority or Alternative? Rethinking Gender and the Use of Medical Knowledge in Song China, 960-1279.
- Tereasa Maillie: Tears of Blood and Sorrow: Depression and Women in Traditional China
- Outlook
As recent as half a century ago, the history of medicine was primarily a field preoccupied with the development of medical ideas about diseases and treatments and how they changed over time. After the rise and intervention of the "new" social history, the field has now expanded to being more attentive to the voice of the patient, a methodological turn advocated by such historians of medicine as Roy Porter.

