Dr. Wu Lien-Tuh Wu Lien-Tuh was born in Penang, Malaya, a British colony at the time. His father was an immigrant from China, and his mother also had a Chinese background. At age 17, Wu began studying medicine at Emmanuel College at the University of Cambridge. He was the first person of Chinese descent to graduate from Cambridge with a medical degree. He continued to study transmissible diseases at the School of Tropical Medicine in Liverpool, England, and at the Pasteur Institute in Paris, France. Wu returned to Malaya in 1903 where he married, worked as a physician, and promoted social and educational reforms. He and his family moved to China in 1907. The Great Manchurian Plague In 1910, an extremely deadly epidemic quickly spread throughout northeastern China, an area which functioned as a crossroads between several nations. The outbreak, which had a mortality rate greater than 95 percent, caused widespread international concern. The Chinese government sent Doctor Wu to the aff
Modern designers have an opportunity, and responsibility to broaden and deepen their view of what design is and has been, and who has done it. We need to discover and amplify stories of black designers, indigenous designers, designers of color, and other minority designers who's voices and identities didn't fit into the colonialist world view which currently dominates in design history.