Scurlock, 2005
| Publication | Publication Date | Title |
|---|---|---|
| Scurlock | Magico-medical means of treating ghost-induced illnesses in ancient Mesopotamia | |
| Favazza | Bodies under siege: Self-mutilation and body modification in culture and psychiatry | |
| Breiner | Slaughter of the innocents: Child abuse through the ages and today | |
| Delaney et al. | The curse: A cultural history of menstruation | |
| Favazza | Bodies under siege: Self-mutilation, nonsuicidal self-injury, and body modification in culture and psychiatry | |
| McMillen | None of these diseases | |
| Jones | Sanapia: Comanche medicine woman | |
| Berdoe | The origin and growth of the healing art: a popular history of medicine in all ages and countries | |
| Forrest et al. | Witches, whores, and sorcerers: the concept of evil in early Iran | |
| Fields | Pestilence and headcolds: encountering illness in colonial Mexico | |
| Chrystal | In bed with the Romans | |
| Ferngren et al. | Essential Readings in Medicine and Religion | |
| Wolf | Cultural conceptualizations of magical practices related to menstrual blood in a transhistorical and transcontinental perspective | |
| Tiwari | Women's Power to Heal: Through Inner Medicine | |
| Cutten | Three thousand years of mental healing | |
| Karim | Shamanism in Bangladesh | |
| Byrne | Health and Wellness in the Renaissance and Enlightenment | |
| Myren et al. | Magic plants in the south of Ghana | |
| Wiggermann et al. | BRILL• STYX | |
| Lecouteux | Traditional Magic Spells for Protection and Healing | |
| Devisch | Treating the affect by remodelling the body in a Yaka healing cult | |
| Ward | Curing on Ponape: a medical ethnography. | |
| Khomeini | The little green book | |
| DiMarco | The Bearer of Crazed and Venomous Fangs: Popular Myths and Learned Delusions Regarding the Bite of the Mad Dog | |
| Weiss | Diagnostic concepts and medicinal plant use of the Chatino (Oaxaca, Mexico) with a comparison of Chinese medicine |