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Ilza Veith

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Ilza Fanny Veith (born Ilza Hirschmann, May 13, 1912, Ludwigshafen – June 8, 2013, Tiburon, California) was a German-born, American historian of medicine, specializing in the history of psychiatric medicine and Oriental medicine.

Biography[edit]

Ilza Hirschmann was the daughter of Jewish parents, the schnapps manufacturer Gustav Hirschmann (1882–1945)[1] and Minna Hertz Hirschmann. From 1934 to 1936 Ilza Hirschmann studied medicine in Geneva and Vienna.[2] On October 20, 1935, she married the lawyer Hans von Valentini Veith,[3] whose father Dr. Julius Veith was a Jewish convert to Lutheranism. Hans and Ilza Veith fled in 1935 to Italy and in 1937 emigrated to the US, where they settled in Baltimore. Both of them became naturalized American citizens in 1945.[4][2]

At the Institute for the History of Medicine of Johns Hopkins University, Ilza Veith graduated in 1944 with an M.A. and in 1947 with a Ph.D. in the history of medicine.[citation needed] She was the first person to receive in the United States a Ph.D. specifically in the history of medicine.[2][5] At Johns Hopkins University, her mentor and doctoral advisor was Henry Sigerist, who suggested that her Ph.D. thesis should be the translation and analysis of the Yellow Emperor's Inner Classic (Huangdi Neijing, 黃帝內經).[6][7]

At the University of Chicago, Ilza Veith taught and did research in the history of medicine. She was from 1949 to 1951 a lecturer and an assistant professor from 1953 to 1963. In 1963 she was a Sloan visiting professor at the Meninger School of Psychiatry. At the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF), she was a professor of the history of medicine and vice-chair of the Department of the History of Medicine from 1964 to 1979, when she retired as professor emerita. At UCSF she was also from 1967 to 1979 a professor of the history of psychiatry.[2][7]

Professor Veith held several lectureships, including the D.J. Davies lectureship (University of Illinois, 1958), John Shaw Billings lectureship (Indiana University School of Medicine, 1963), George W. Corner lectureship (University of Rochester, 1970), Logan Clendenning lectureship (University of Kansas School of Medicine, 1971), and Hideyo Noguchi lectureship (Johns Hopkins University, 1977).[2] In 1974 she gave the American Association for the History of Medicine's Garrison Lecture.[8] She served on the council of the American Association for the History of Medicine from 1958 to 1962 and from 1973 to 1977. She contributed numerous articles to refereed journals and was the author or coauthor of several books.[2] Her book Hysteria: The History of a Disease is widely read and has become a minor classic.[9] She served on the editorial boards of the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) and the Encyclopedia Britannica.[2]

The Ilza Veith papers include correspondence with a number of noteworthy people, including John Z. Bowers (1913–1993), Francis J. Braceland (1900–1985), Ronald Chen[2] (b. 1931; author of Foreign medical graduates in psychiatry: issues and problems),[10] Morris Fishbein, Chauncey D. Leake, Helen Vincent McClean (1894–1983), Frank William Newell (1916–1998), and John Bertrand deCusance Morant Saunders (1903–1991).[2]

Veith was fluent in five languages: German, French, English, Chinese, and Japanese. In 1975 she received the title of Iguka Hakase (Honorary Doctor of Medical Science) from the Medical School of Juntendo University.[11] By donating a number of her Japanese medical books, she helped to build UCSF's East Asian medicine collection.[5]

In 1964 Ilza Veith suffered a stroke which caused her to be hemiplegic for the remainder of her life.[3] In 1988 the University of California Press published her account of the stroke and its effects on her life. According to Sandra W. Moss, M.D., the book "remains a classic of its genre".[6] Ilza Veith's husband died on March 9, 1991.[3]

Selected publications[edit]

Articles[edit]

  • Veith, Ilza (1945). "Englishman or Samurai: The Story of Will Adams". The Far Eastern Quarterly. 5 (1): 5–27. doi:10.2307/2049448. JSTOR 2049448.
  • Veith, Ilza (1947). "A Japanese picture of leprosy". Bulletin of the History of Medicine. 21 (6): 905–917. PMID 18900344.
  • Veith, Ilza (1957). "Medical Ethics Throughout the Ages". Archives of Internal Medicine. 100 (3): 504–512. doi:10.1001/archinte.1957.00260090160022. PMID 13457475.
  • Veith, Ilza (1958). "Henry E. Sigerist: Orientalist". Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences. 13 (2): 200–211. doi:10.1093/jhmas/XIII.2.200. JSTOR 24619694. PMID 13525706.
  • Veith, Ilza (1960). "Japanese Medicine Today". Archives of Surgery. 81 (3): 467–472. doi:10.1001/archsurg.1960.01300030127016. PMID 13841572.
  • Veith, Ilza (1960). "Creation and Evolution in the Far East". Perspectives in Biology and Medicine. 3 (4): 528–546. doi:10.1353/pbm.1960.0029. PMID 13841571.
  • Veith, Ilza (1960). "Twin Birth: Blessing or Disaster. A Japanese View". International Journal of Social Psychiatry. 6 (3–4): 230–236. doi:10.1177/002076406000600309.
  • Veith, Ilza (1965). "Physician Travelers in Japan". JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association. 192 (2): 137–140. doi:10.1001/jama.1965.03080150067016. PMID 14263525.
  • Veith, Ilza (1970). "Historical Reflections on Longevity". Perspectives in Biology and Medicine. 13 (2): 255–263. doi:10.1353/pbm.1970.0022. PMID 4907081.
  • Veith, I. (1975). "Sir William Osler—acupuncturist". Bulletin of the New York Academy of Medicine. 51 (3): 393–399. PMC 1749442. PMID 1089020.
  • Veith, I. (1976). "Benjamin Rush and the beginnings of American Medicine". Western Journal of Medicine. 125 (1): 17–27. PMC 1237175. PMID 782040.
  • Veith, Ilza (1978). "On the Mutual Indebtedness of Japanese and Western Medicine". Bulletin of the History of Medicine. 52 (3): 383–409. JSTOR 44450504. PMID 376011.
  • Veith, Ilza (1978). "Psychiatric Foundations in the Far East". Psychiatric Annals. 8 (6): 12–41. doi:10.3928/0048-5713-19780601-04.
  • Veith, I. (1980). "Changing concepts of health care: An historian's view". The Western Journal of Medicine. 133 (6): 532–538. PMC 1272426. PMID 7008361.

Books and monographs[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Gustav Hirschmann, Gedenkbuch, Baden-Baden
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Register of the Ilza Veith Papers, 1965-81". University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) Library, Online Archives of California.
  3. ^ a b c "Obituary. Ilza Veith". San Francisco Chronicle. June 2013.
  4. ^ "Bavarian Aerial Observer Lieutenant Hans Veith". Orders & Medals Society of America (omsa.org).
  5. ^ a b Hurley, Erin (7 April 2021). "The Women Behind the Japanese Woodblock Print Collection". Brought to Light, blog at UCSF Library.
  6. ^ a b Nunes, Everardo Duarte (2015). "Ilza Veith (1912-2013) e Genevieve Miller (1914-2013): longas vidas dedicadas à história da medicina". Ciência & Saúde Coletiva. 20: 2125–2128. English translation from the Portuguese original
  7. ^ a b Daum, Andreas W.; Lehmann, Hartmut; Sheehan, James J., eds. (2016). "Ilza Fanny Veith". The Second Generation: Émigrés from Nazi Germany as Historians. With a Biobibliographic Guide. New York: Berghahn Books. pp. 446–447. p. 447
  8. ^ Veith, I. "Blinders of the mind. Historical reflections on functional impairment of vision". Bulletin of the History of Medicine. 48 (4): 603–516. JSTOR 44450165. PMID 4618150. The Fielding H. Garrison Lecture.
  9. ^ Hessenbruch, Arne (16 December 2013). Reader's Guide to the History of Science. Routledge. pp. 365–366. ISBN 978-1-134-26294-6.
  10. ^ Chen, Ronald (1981). Foreign medical graduates in psychiatry: issues and problems. New York: Human Sciences Press. ISBN 0877054851. LCCN 79017189. With A. Gail Mazaraki; 443 pages; illustrated.
  11. ^ Zimmerman, Leo; Veith, Ilza (1993). "About the authors". Great Ideas in the History of Surgery. San Francisco: Norman Publishing. 1st edition. Baltimore: Williams & Wilkins. 1961.
  12. ^ Merskey, H. (1985). "review of Hysteria: The History of a Disease by Ilza Veith". British Journal of Psychiatry. 147 (5): 576–579. doi:10.1192/S0007125000208519.
  13. ^ Rosenberg, Charles (1965). "Historical Sociology of Medical Thought: Hysteria: The History of a Disease by Ilza Veith". Science. 150 (3694): 330. doi:10.1126/science.150.3694.330.a.