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Josh Fage

Josh Fage

· Assistant Professor (CHS)

University of Wisconsin-Madison · Radiology

Active 1952–2023

h-index15
Citations1.0k
Papers1734 last 5y
Funding
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About

Josh Fage, MD, is an Assistant Professor (CHS) in the Department of Radiology at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health. He specializes in Neuroradiology and has completed his medical education at LSU Health Shreveport School of Medicine in 2014. Dr. Fage completed his internship at John Peter Smith Hospital in 2015, followed by a residency at Barnes Jewish Hospital/Washington University in 2019. He further advanced his expertise through fellowships at Duke University in 2020 and at Washington University in 2023. His professional focus is on radiology, with a particular emphasis on neuroradiology, contributing to the department's clinical and educational missions.

Research topics

  • History
  • Computer Science
  • Sociology
  • Geography
  • Thermodynamics
  • World Wide Web
  • Mechanical engineering
  • Meteorology
  • Physics
  • Engineering
  • Media studies

Selected publications

  • SOME THOUGHTS ON MIGRATION AND URBAN SETTLEMENT

    University of California Press eBooks · 2023

    1st authorCorresponding
    • Computer Science
    • Geography
    • History
  • AFH volume 62 issue 3 Cover and Front matter

    The Journal of African History · 2021

    • Sociology
    • History
    • Media studies

    An abstract is not available for this content so a preview has been provided. As you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.

  • A Evolução da historiografia da Africa

    2020-01-31 · 1 citations

    book-chapterSenior author
  • Reflections on the Early History of the Mossi-Dagomba Group of States

    2018-09-03 · 9 citations

    book-chapter1st authorCorresponding

    The history of the Mossi-Dagomba states lying astride the modern border between Ghana and the Volta Republic has for the most part been looked at from the north, from the viewpoint of Mossi tradition. The seventeenth-century Timbuctu Tarikhs record the sack of Timbuctu by the Mossi in a.d. 1333, a raid against Benka c. 1433–4, and a great raid during 1477–83 which is said to have reached as far as Walata. The Tarikhs afford clear evidence that with the re-establishment of imperial power in the middle Niger valley under the Songhai kings Sonni Ali (c. 1465–92) and Askia Muhammad (1493–1528), the later raids provoked serious retaliation. It seems likely that this change in the balance of power in the Niger valley may have pushed Mossi-Dagomba southwards and have inclined them to seek profit from the levying of tribute on the kinship groups of the upper Volta basin rather than from raiding northwards.

  • Barbot on Guinea: The Writings of Jean Barbot on West Africa, I678-I7I2,

    2016-01-01

    articleSenior author

    In the early days of the J. Afr. Hist., this reviewer wrote uncharitably about publishers who would cheerfully produce so-called new editions of the great classical works of Africana with little or nothing in the way of editorial matter to guide readers through their often difficult and sometimes even misleading texts.' It is now beginning to look as though those days are passing. Indeed, even in the I960s as he was writing, the way forward was being shown within the Memdrias series of the Centro de Estudos de Cartografia Antiga in Lisbon; one might in particular recall the work of the late Admiral A. Teixeira da Mota.2 If perhaps in the wider world too little notice was taken of this initiative, it could well have been a factor leading to the establishment of the Union Academique Internationale's Fontes Historiae Africanae series, and to the British Academy's sponsorship of those of its volumes published in the United Kingdom. Among these, Albert van Dantzig and Adam Jones's annotated English translation of Pieter de Marees's I602 description of the Gold Coast is a quite excellent example of what can be achieved in relation to West Africa.3 But now, with this edition of Jean Barbot's writings, the Hakluyt Society's series of modern editions of the original accounts of notable voyages and travels, a series which has upheld wholly laudable standards of scholarship for the best part of I 50 years, has returned to a field which at least so far as concerns West Africa it has rather neglected since the halcyon years I937-42, when it issued editions of Pacheco's Esmeraldo by George Kimble and of Ca' Da Mosto's Voyages by G. R. Crone, and John Blake's selection of documents illustrating the earliest European contacts wvith Guinea.' Professor Hair, the chief editor of the Hakluyt Society's two new volumes, was long a collaborator with Teixeira da Mota,5 and it must now be something like twenty years ago that he began to argue the need for a full scholarly edition of the

  • A History of Africa

    2013-10-23 · 4 citations

    book1st authorCorresponding
  • Guide to original sources for precolonial western Africa : an updated and expanded supplement to Fage (1994)

    Medical Entomology and Zoology · 2006-01-01

    bookSenior author
  • HIA volume 30 Cover and Front matter

    History in Africa · 2003-01-01

    articleOpen access

    An abstract is not available for this content so a preview has been provided. As you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.

  • HIA volume 26 Cover and Front matter

    History in Africa · 1999-01-01 · 1 citations

    articleOpen access

    An abstract is not available for this content so a preview has been provided. As you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.

  • INTRODUCING AFRICA <i>Africa</i>. Edited by P<scp>HYLLIS</scp> M. M<scp>ARTIN</scp> and P<scp>ATRICK</scp> O'M<scp>EARA</scp>. Bloomington, Indiana University Press, and London, James Currey, 3rd edn., 1995. Pp. xx + 448; £14.95, paperback (<scp>ISBN</scp> 0-85255-230-0).

    The Journal of African History · 1997-03-01

    article1st authorCorresponding

    The first edition of Phyllis Martin's and Patrick O'Meara's collection under the simple title Africa appeared twenty years ago to meet the need which its editors, who teach in the African Studies Program at Indiana University, had felt for a multi-disciplinary introduction to the subject for undergraduates embarking for the first time on work relating to the continent. It has twenty-one chapters, each of which is written by an author – sometimes a pair of authors – who has lived and worked in Africa, some of whom have international reputations in their particular disciplines. These are arranged in four sections.

Frequent coauthors

  • S. Marks

    Birkbeck, University of London

    214 shared
  • Andrew Roberts

    179 shared
  • Robin Law

    175 shared
  • Roland Oliver

    147 shared
  • Martin Klein

    134 shared
  • Kwame Arhin

    134 shared
  • John Lonsdale

    Trinity College

    134 shared
  • Philip D. Curtin

    132 shared

Education

  • M.D.

    LSU Health Shreveport School of Medicine

    2014
  • Other

    John Peter Smith Hospital

    2015
  • Other

    Barnes Jewish Hospital/Washington University

    2019
  • Other

    Duke University

    2020
  • Other

    Washington University

    2023
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