Staff Finds: The Photography of Mark Rosenberg

Black and white image of a woman and man protesting against the Vietnam War among a crowd of protestors. The woman is holding a sign that says "Vietnam War to end all peace."
Vietnam War Protestors.

While processing the papers of Mark Rosenberg, center staff came across records related to Rosenberg’s activities as a photographer. As an undergraduate at Harvard, Rosenberg was a photographer for the Harvard Crimson and later on his work appeared in the Harvard Alumni Bulletin and the Harvard Medical Alumni Bulletin. He accompanied anthropologist and Harvard University faculty member Evon Vogt to Mexico as a photographer as part of the Harvard Chiapas Project. From 1978 to 1980, he was a Tutor in Photography at Radcliffe College.

Starting in 1976, Rosenberg worked on a project to document the human side of injury and illness, as contrasted with the coldness and sterility of medical technology. In his book, Patients: the Experience of Illness (1980), he combined photographs and interviews to show the effects of illness on the lives of six people with different diseases. In an interview after the publication of Patients, Rosenberg discussed the intersection of medicine and photography:

Pictures of sick people are conspicuous by their absence and the segregation of the seriously ill into hospitals and nursing homes ensures that most of us will never see ‘the real thing’. An unfortunate consequence of keeping illness under wraps is that we might come to think that sick people are too horrifying to look at. And if we can’t look at them, we certainly can’t talk to them. In the end, we may leave patients unable to talk about their illnesses with family or friends just when they are most in need of support.

A selection of Rosenberg’s photographs from the collection can be seen below.

Rosenberg (B.A., 1967, Harvard College; M.D., 1972, Harvard Medical School) was President and Chief Executive Officer of the Task Force for Global Health (1999-2016) and worked at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) (1980-1999), helping to establish the CDC’s National Center for Injury Prevention and Control and serving as the first Director (1994-1999).

The processing of the Rosenberg papers is nearing completion and the finding aid will be available soon. For information regarding access to this collection, please contact the Public Services staff.

Close up black and white photograph of Robert F. Kennedy.
Robert F. Kennedy
  
Black and white headshot of HMS Dean Daniel Tosteson.
HMS Dean Daniel Tosteson
  
Black and white action shot of a soccer match. One player is in a white uniform numbered 21 and is running towards another player in a black uniform. The player in the black uniform is hovering in the air and kicking a soccer ball.
Soccer Match
  
Black and white photograph of HMS Dean for Faculty Affairs Eleanor Shore.
HMS Dean for Faculty Affairs Eleanor Shore
  
Black and white portait of a Mayan man from Zinacantan with cloth wrapped around his head.
Mayan man from Zinacantan
  
Black and white image of the Kresge Building at Harvard School of Public Health. The image is from the perspective of looking up at the sky from the ground, and the building is separated into four different columns-like structures.
Kresge Building, Harvard School of Public Health
  
Black and white image of a Mayan child from Zinacantan wearing ragged clothes and pouring a drink from a bottle into a glass. There is another child is in the background.
Mayan child from Zinacantan
  
Black and white image of two young boys with their dog in a yard.
Children with dog
  
Black and white image of HMS Dean Robert Ebert at a protest. Ebert is holding a sign that says "War Health Choose One" with check boxes next to War and Health. Ebert is talking to another man while holding the sign high.
HMS Dean Robert Ebert

This news post was originally published on the Center for the History of Medicine’s Wordpress site.