In 1979 he joined the Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine (part ofUniversity College London) as a lecturer. In 1993 he became Professor of Social History at the institute.[1][3] He briefly served as its director. In 2000, Porter publishedThe Enlightenment: Britain and the Creation of the Modern World. He retired in September 2001, moving toSt Leonards-on-Sea, where he wanted to learn to play the saxophone, cultivate his allotment and engage in some travelling.[2][4][5] He died of a heart attack five months later, while cycling.[5] His memorial service was on 22 April 2002 atSt Pancras Parish Church.[5]
He was married five times, firstly toSue Limb (1970), then Jacqueline Rainfray (1983), then Dorothy Watkins (1987), then Hannah Augstein, and finally his wife at the time of his death, Natsu Hattori.[2][3][6]
He was known for the fact that he needed very little sleep.[1][3][5]
Roy Porter gave an annual history lecture to the boys at Wilson's School, Wallington.
Porter made many television and radio appearances. He was an original presenter ofBBC Radio 3'sNight Waves,[1] a programme on which he was scheduled to appear, discussing doctors in literature, at the point of his death.[2]
He also spoke at a large variety of events, and was known for his oratorical talents.[4]
A plaque for the memory of Porter was unveiled by the Mayor of Lewisham in a ceremony that took place on Thursday 5 June 2008 at 13 Camplin Street, New Cross Gate, London.[8]
Starting with the publishing of his PhD thesis, asThe Making of Geology in 1977, Porter wrote or edited over 100 books,[3][4] an academic output that was, and is, considered remarkable.[2][3] The poetMichael Hofmann called him "a one-man book factory."[9] He is particularly notable for his work in the history of medicine, in pioneering an approach that focuses on patients rather than doctors.[1][3] Despite his recognition in the history of medicine, he is quoted as saying, "I'm not really a medical historian. I'm a social historian and an 18th century man".[5] In addition to the history of medicine and other sciences, he specialised in thesocial history of 18th-centuryBritain and theEnlightenment. He also wrote and lectured on the history of London. WithG. E. Berrios, Porter publishedA History of Clinical Psychiatry (1985) and co-edited the international journalHistory of Psychiatry (1989).[10] He also edited the journalHistory of Science for many years.[1][5]
In 2007 Roberta Bivins andJohn V. Pickstone editedMedicine, Madness and Social History: Essays in Honour of Roy Porter (Palgrave Macmillan). Several of the essays address Porter's work directly, and William F. Bynum appends a biographical sketch.
"Under the influence": mesmerism in England (September 1985)
The Rise and Fall of the Age of Miracles (November 1996)
Bethlam/Bedlam: Methods of Madness? (October 1997)
Reading is Bad for your Health (March 1998)
Matrix of modernity – Roy Porter discusses how the British Enlightenment paved the way for the creation of the modern world (April 2001)
The body politic: diseases and discourses – Roy Porter shows how 18th-century images of the medical profession flow over into the work of political caricaturists (October 2001)
^Grob, Gerald N. (1 May 2003). "Review:Blood and Guts: A Short History of Medicine by Roy Porter".N Engl J Med.348:1823–1824.doi:10.1056/NEJM200305013481823.