Renaissance Men

Agents of Medical and Cultural Modernity

Coming Soon

Contributors

By Harriet A. Washington

Formats and Prices

On Sale
Nov 10, 2026
Page Count
352 pages
ISBN-13
9780316583602

Price

$32.00

Price

$42.00 CAD

The gripping, untold stories of three unsung Black physicians and their critical contributions to the field of medicine and American culture, from the National Book Critics Circle Award-winning author of Medical Apartheid


Between 1847 and 1952, three New York City doctors transformed medicine, catalyzed racial equity, elevated American culture, then were all but lost to history—until now.

James McCune Smith, MD., Rudolph Fisher, MD., and Louis T. Wright, MD each helped shape our nation and advance medicine while sharing overlapping passions—an uncompromising, even militant opposition to racial fetters; medical research that refused racial denigration; and literary acumen. While not strictly contemporaries, they were bound across time through obstacles that parallel those we confront today. Medical exclusion and disparagement, rampant healthcare inequities paired with housing segregation, racial abuse and police violence, lynching, the suppression of Black history —and even racial bars to higher medical education—that mirrored today’s challenges to affirmative action. 

In this comprehensive slice of previously unrevealed history, renowned writer and scholar Harriet Washington sheds light on Black physicians who pioneered important medical achievements that benefit the health of all Americans. Renaissance Men draws parallels between contemporary and historical medical exclusion and healthcare inequities and reveals a powerful argument for supporting current medical aspirants of color. Surfacing this long-buried history shows us what genius we stand to lose if medicine doesn’t rectify its current course of racial exclusion.


Harriet A. Washington

About the Author

Harriet A. Washington has been a fellow in ethics at the Harvard Medical School, a fellow at the Harvard School of Public Health, a senior research scholar at the National Center for Bioethics at Tuskegee University, and a lecturer in bioethics at Columbia University whence she earned a master in journalism. She has been an editor at USA Today and several other national publications, a Knight Fellow at Stanford University, and has written for such academic forums as the Harvard Public Health Review, Nature, JAMA, The Lancet, and The New England Journal of Medicine and is pursuing a master’s degree in the history of medicine at Johns Hopkins University. Washington is the recipient of several prestigious awards for her work and lives in New York City.

Learn more about this author