Halloween legend: The "Dance of Death" in medicine

Physician and Nobleman from the Lübeck Totentanz

Nobleman and Physician from the Lübeck Totentanz

According to a Halloween legend, “Death” appears at midnight every Halloween and summons the dead to dance for him while he plays a fiddle. The dance ends at daybreak, at which time the dead return to their graves.

The “Dance of Death” is also a common late-medieval (1300s and later) European artistic genre that emphasizes the universality of death regardless of one’s status in life. “Dance of Death” illustrations show skeletons cavorting with humans (often of high social status, such as popes or kings) as the skeletons lead the humans to their death. The above illustration shows two skeletons leading a physician and a nobleman.

Death was a constant presence in medieval life since plagues, wars, and infant mortality were common. “Dance of Death” illustrations—often accompanied by poems—appeared in books and were the theme of many frescos in religious and civic buildings.

Interested in learning more about this fascinating medieval obsession?

  • The Library’s History of Medicine collection has three books on the topic. For more information, contact Bill Maina, the Library’s History of Medicine librarian, by email at bill.maina@utsouthwestern.edu or by phone at 214-648-2629.
  • The University of Glasgow Library Special Collections has an excellent online “Dancing with Death” exhibit.
  • The ARTstor digital library of art has several illustrations of the “Dance of Death”.
  • HathiTrust provides access to a number of full-text digitized books about the topic.

Open Access Week: Starting your own journal

Open-AccessInterested in starting an open access journal or migrating an existing open access journal? The Library can help publish open access journals using resources available through the Texas Digital Library. The publishing workflow is managed using Open Journals System (OJS) software. Features include:

  • Handling online submissions from authors
  • Managing the peer-review process
  • Publishing issues online
  • Indexing content

The submission requirements, peer-review process, and the journal’s look and feel are customizable. OJS can also manage subscription-based journals with delayed open access options. Email notification and commenting tools further enhance the publication workflow.

The Texas Digital Library provides a list of existing hosted peer-reviewed online journals. Another journal using OJS is the UBC Medical Journal (a student-run academic journal that hopes to engage students in dialogs in medicine).

eLife, Biomedical Imaging and Intervention, and the Open Women’s Health Journal are some other examples of biomedical open access journals. Some journals provide limited open access. BMJ provides open access articles for all research articles published.

For more information about starting or migrating an open access journal, contact the library at libwebmaster@utsouthwestern.edu. Training and other assistance is available.

November 19 lecture offers reflections of Kennedy Assassination by 1963 Parkland E.R. doctor

Photo: Garett Fisbeck/The Dallas Morning News

Photo: Garett Fisbeck/The Dallas Morning News

Robert McClelland, M.D., has a unique perspective on the Kennedy assassination from his service in the emergency room at Parkland Hospital on that fateful day 50 years ago. On Tuesday, November 19, 2013, the Library and the Department of Surgery will sponsor a reception in Dr. McClelland’s honor, during which Dr. McClelland will share his reflections on the Kennedy presidency and its tragic end in Dallas.

Dr. McClelland went on to have an outstanding career as an instructor and then full professor in the UT Southwestern Department of Surgery where he held the Alvin W. Baldwin Chair in Surgery from 1977-2007.  Dr. McClelland has been Professor Emeritus in the Department of Surgery since 2007 and Adjunct Professor of Law at the Dedman School of Law, Southern Methodist University, since 2008.

Daniel Podolsky, M.D., President of UT Southwestern, will introduce Dr. McClelland.  Michael Choti, M.D., Chair, Department of Surgery, will host the event, which will be held in the McDermott Lecture Hall, Room D.1.602. The reception will begin at 5:30 p.m., and Dr. McClelland’s presentation will begin at 6 p.m.

Preregistration is not required, but seating is limited; so please come early!  For more information, contact John Fullinwider, by phone at 214-648-3801 or by email at john.fullinwider@utsouthwestern.edu.