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Liepman Literary Agency
Marc Koralnik |
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SAY ANARCHA
In 1846, a young surgeon, J. Marion Sims (The Father of Gynecology), began several years of experimental surgeries on a young enslaved woman known as Anarcha (The Mother of Gynecology). This series of proceduresperformed without anesthesia and resulting in Anarcha's so-called cureforever altered the path of women's health. Despite brutal practices and failed techniques, Sims proclaimed himself the curer of obstetric fistula, a horrific condition that had stymied the medical world for centuries. Parlaying supposed success to the founding of a new hospital in New York Citywhere he conducted additional dangerous experiments on Irish womenSims went on to a profitable career treating gentry and royalty in Europe, becoming one of the world's first celebrity surgeons. Medical text after medical text hailed Anarcha as a pivotal figure in the history of medicine, but little was recorded about the woman herself.
Through extensive research, author J.C. Hallman has unearthed the first evidence ever found of Anarcha's life that did not come from Sims's suspect reports. With incredible tenacity, Hallman traced Anarcha's path from her beginnings on a Southern plantation, to the backyard clinic where she was subjected to scores of painful surgical experiments, to her years after in Richmond and New York City, and to her final resting place in a lonely Virginia forest.
When Hallman first set out to find Anarcha, the world was just beginning to grapple with the history of white supremacy and its connection to racial health disparities exposed by Covid-19 and the disproportionate number of Black women who die while giving birth. In telling the stories of the Mother and Father of gynecology, SAY ANARCHA excavates the history of a heroic enslaved woman and deconstructs the biographical smokescreen of a surgeon that history has falsely enshrined as a heroic pioneer. Kin in spirit to The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, Hallman's dual biographical narratives tell a single story that corrects errors calcified in history and illuminates the sacrifice of a young woman who changed the world only to be forgotten by ituntil now.
J.C. Hallman grew up in Southern California. He studied creative writing at the University of Pittsburgh, the Writing Seminars at Johns Hopkins, and the Iowa Writers' Workshop. His work has been widely published in Harper's, GQ, The Baffler, Tin House Magazine, The New Republic, and elsewhere. Hallman was a recipient of a 2010 McKnight Artist Fellowship in fiction and a Fellowship from the John Simon Guggenheim Foundation in the general non-fiction category.
Through extensive research, author J.C. Hallman has unearthed the first evidence ever found of Anarcha's life that did not come from Sims's suspect reports. With incredible tenacity, Hallman traced Anarcha's path from her beginnings on a Southern plantation, to the backyard clinic where she was subjected to scores of painful surgical experiments, to her years after in Richmond and New York City, and to her final resting place in a lonely Virginia forest.
When Hallman first set out to find Anarcha, the world was just beginning to grapple with the history of white supremacy and its connection to racial health disparities exposed by Covid-19 and the disproportionate number of Black women who die while giving birth. In telling the stories of the Mother and Father of gynecology, SAY ANARCHA excavates the history of a heroic enslaved woman and deconstructs the biographical smokescreen of a surgeon that history has falsely enshrined as a heroic pioneer. Kin in spirit to The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, Hallman's dual biographical narratives tell a single story that corrects errors calcified in history and illuminates the sacrifice of a young woman who changed the world only to be forgotten by ituntil now.
J.C. Hallman grew up in Southern California. He studied creative writing at the University of Pittsburgh, the Writing Seminars at Johns Hopkins, and the Iowa Writers' Workshop. His work has been widely published in Harper's, GQ, The Baffler, Tin House Magazine, The New Republic, and elsewhere. Hallman was a recipient of a 2010 McKnight Artist Fellowship in fiction and a Fellowship from the John Simon Guggenheim Foundation in the general non-fiction category.
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Book
Published 2023-06-01 by Henry Holt |