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    Oral History Interview, Norman Fost (1031)

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    Fost_1031_1_30_2009.mp3 (133.1Mb)
    Fost_1031_2_13_2009.mp3 (168.4Mb)
    Fost_1031_4_3_2009.mp3 (176.7Mb)
    Fost_1031_5_19_2009.mp3 (127.5Mb)
    Fost_1031_7_2_2009.mp3 (138.9Mb)
    Fost_1031_index.rtf (299.4Kb)
    Date
    2009-01-30
    Author
    Fost, Norman
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    In his five 2009 interviews with Robert Lange, Dr. Norman Fost discusses his early life in the New York metropolitan area, his education at Princeton, Yale, and Johns Hopkins, and his teaching, research and service while at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He details the personal and professional motivations that caused him to explore the emerging field of medical ethics, and chronicles a number of significant media events, public commissions, and powerful people that were involved in his career as a bioethicist. He also discusses how he and others developed the IRB and medical ethics as a curriculum and service area at UW and a number of controversial viewpoints and cases in which he was involved during his tenure at the university. This interview was conducted for inclusion in the University of Wisconsin Oral History Project.
    Subject
    Newark NJ, Pediatrics, Jewish culture, Connie Francis, Princeton University
    Permanent Link
    http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/82616
    Type
    Recording, oral
    Description
    During his five interviews in 2009, Dr. Norman Fost discusses how his education affected his personal and professional motivations and why he explored the emerging field of medical ethics. Click the index to learn more.
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    • UW-Madison Oral History Program

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