When we think of modern medicine, we often picture cutting-edge laboratories and hospitals. But the human side of the healing arts is just as fascinating. This course examines how culture, ethics and technologies shape medicine. You will gain insight into how humanities thinkers contribute meaningfully to health care teams and health innovation, and how medicine has appeared in arts and the humanities across history and culture.

Topics of Study

  • History of Western medicine
  • How medical knowledge and practice became “professionalized”
  • Debates about what kinds of knowledge “count” in medical education
  • Shifting philosophical ideas about the human body and its relationship to the environment, including the rise of epidemiology and the structural determinants of health
  • Narrative medicine and the distinction between disease (the objective, physical cause of sickness) and illness (a patient’s subjective, lived experience of the disease)
  • Narrative nonfiction writing

Learning Highlights

  • Analyze health and medicine as cultural, historical and ethical systems, not just technical practices
  • Distinguish disease (biological process) from illness (lived experience) and explain why both matter in care
  • Practice close observation, deep listening and narrative interpretation as diagnostic skills
  • Critically examine how AI and data tools are used in health contexts and where human judgment must remain central
  • Collaborate across perspectives to design a human-centered health insight or intervention
  • Articulate how humanities expertise contributes to real health teams and careers

Requirements

  • Students must bring their own laptops
WeekFocusKey TopicsAssignments and Activities
1Medicine as a Human SystemExploring medicine as magic, religion, ritual and performance and examining it in literature, visual art, music and dance Field trip to The Huntington library and gardens, with a lecture and tour by a historian and curator. Sound lab. Movement lab.
2Medical AnthropologyUnderstanding health from environmental, social and systems perspectivesGuest lectures from public health professional, health data scientist and bioethicist. Field trip to Cedars-Sinai Center for the Arts and Humanities in Medicine.
3Narrative MedicineUnderstanding the difference between disease (a biological state) and illness (the lived, internal experience of being sick); ancestral, integral and complementary approaches Guest lecture from health humanities artist. Field trip to USC Health Sciences Library to work with information scientists and archivists.
4Designing Human-Centered Health FuturesLearning how to work on Interdisciplinary teams, AI and future technologies, and future bioethics Guest lecture from medical AI professional. Field trip to theater performance.