Edward Shorter

Faculty Profile

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Shorter, Edward, Ph.D. Harvard, F.R.S.C.
Professor & Hannah Chair in the History of Medicine, Faculty of Medicine (St. G)
history.medicine@utoronto.ca
(416) 978-2124
Office: FitzGerald Building, Room 83G, 150 College Street

Field: Social history of medicine, obstetrics, gynaecology, psychiatry, psychopharmacology; history of the family; history of sexuality.

A social historian of medicine and clinical science, Professor Shorter has published widely in this field, including histories of obstetrics and gynaecology (Women’s Bodies), the doctor-patient relationship (Doctors and Their Patients), psychosomatic illness (From Paralysis to Fatigue), and sexuality (Written in the Flesh: A History of Desire). He is also the author of Partnership for Excellence: Medicine at the University of Toronto and Academic Hospitals (2013), which traces the evolution of Toronto’s academic health science network.

Since 1991 his primary appointment has been in the Faculty of Medicine, where he holds the Jason A. Hannah Chair in the History of Medicine. Since then he has emerged as an internationally recognized historian of psychiatry and the author of numerous books on the evolution of the discipline, including A History of Psychiatry (1997); Before Prozac (2009); and How Everyone Became Depressed (2013). In 1996 he was cross-appointed as a Professor of Psychiatry. His latest book, What Psychiatry Left Out of the DSM-5 (2015), explores the history of psychiatric classification.