Kitta is not only an acclaimed researcher, whose work spans the fields of Folklore, Medicine, and English Studies, but she manages this intense productivity while winning awards for her extraordinary teaching and departmental leadership. She has played a major role in the university’s efforts to forge links between the humanities and the School of Medicine. She engages actively with scholars from other disciplines. Her specialization in the intersection of medicine, belief, and the supernatural led to the publication of her first book Vaccinations and Public Concern in History: Legend, Rumor and Rise Perception (2012), an award winning book that has attracted a remarkable amount of interdisciplinary attention and praise. Her new book, Diagnosing Folklore: Perspective on Health, Trauma, and Disability (2015) illustrates the contribution she is making to the growing field of disability studies.…