Well since spring is officially here, I guess I’m overdue in posting my winter reading. For being snowed in several weekends this winter, I think I must have done more hibernating than reading/work! My reading seemed to be all over the place and more than usual off-topic to be listed here. I shall try to do better this spring!
Books
M.L. Cameron: Anglo-Saxon Medicine. Cambridge University Press, 2006.
Tim Clarkson. Strathclyde and the Anglo-Saxons in the Viking Age, Birlinn Books, 2014
Hamerow, H. (2004). Early Medieval Settlements: The Archaeology of Rural Communities in Northwest Europe, 400-900. Oxford University Press.
PhD Dissertations/Theses
Green, T. (2011). A Re-evaluation of the Evidence of Anglian-British Interaction in the Lincoln Region (pp. 1–347). Trinity: University of Oxford.
Notable papers
Halsall, G. (2014). Two Worlds Become One: A ‘Counter-Intuitive’ View of the Roman Empire and “Germanic” Migration. German History, 32(4), 515–532. doi:10.1093/gerhis/ghu107
Faure, E. (2014). Malarial pathocoenosis: beneficial and deleterious interactions between malaria and other human diseases. Frontiers in Physiology, 5. doi:10.3389/fphys.2014.00441/abstract
Richard, V., Riehm, J. M., Herindrainy, P., Soanandrasana, R., Ratsitoharina, M., Rakotomanana, F., et al. (2015). Pneumonic Plague Outbreak, Northern Madagascar, 2011. Emerging Infectious Diseases, 21(1).
DeWitte, S. N. (2015). Bioarchaeology and the Ethics of Research Using Human Skeletal Remains.History Compass, 13(1), 10–19. doi:10.1111/hic3.12213
Gonzalez, R. J., Lane, M. C., Wagner, N. J., Weening, E. H., & Miller, V. L. (2015). Dissemination of a Highly Virulent Pathogen: Tracking The Early Events That Define Infection. PLoS Pathogens,11(1), e1004587. doi:10.1371/journal.ppat.1004587.s010
Wang, X., Liang, J., Xi, J., Yang, J., Wang, M., Tian, K., et al. (2014). Canis lupus familiaris involved in the transmission of pathogenic Yersinia spp. in China. Veterinary Microbiology, 172(1-2), 339–344. doi:10.1016/j.vetmic.2014.04.015
Singer, M., & Clair, S. (2003). Syndemics and public health: reconceptualizing disease in bio-social context. Medical Anthropology Quarterly, 17(4), 423–441.
Rock, M., Buntain, B. J.,Hatfield, J. M., & HallgrImsson, B. (2009). Animal–human connections, “‘one health,’” and the syndemic approach to prevention. Social Science & Medicine (1982), 68(6), 991–995. doi:10.1016/j.socscimed.2008.12.047
Ostrach, B., & Singer, M. (2013). Syndemics of War: Malnutrition-Infectious Disease Interactions and the Unintended Health Consequences of International War Policies. Annals of Anthropological Practice, 36(2), 257–273. doi:10.1111/napa.12003