Illness as Many Narratives: Arts, Medicine and Culture
Illness narratives have become a cultural phenomenon in the Western world. In what ways can they be seen to have aesthetic, ethical and political value? What do they reveal about experiences of illness, the relationship between the body and identity and the role of the arts in bearing witness to illness for people who are ill and those connected to them? How can they influence medicine, the arts and shape public understandings of health and illness? These questions and more are explored in Illness as Many Narratives, which contains readings of a rich array of representations of illness from the 1980s to the present. A wide range of arts and media are considered such as life writing, photography, performance, film, theatre, artists’ books and animation. The individual chapters deploy multidisciplinary critical frameworks and discuss physical and mental illness. Through reading this book you will gain an understanding of the complex contribution illness narratives make to contemporary culture and the emergent field of Critical Medical Humanities.

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Illness as Many Narratives: Arts, Medicine and Culture
Illness narratives have become a cultural phenomenon in the Western world. In what ways can they be seen to have aesthetic, ethical and political value? What do they reveal about experiences of illness, the relationship between the body and identity and the role of the arts in bearing witness to illness for people who are ill and those connected to them? How can they influence medicine, the arts and shape public understandings of health and illness? These questions and more are explored in Illness as Many Narratives, which contains readings of a rich array of representations of illness from the 1980s to the present. A wide range of arts and media are considered such as life writing, photography, performance, film, theatre, artists’ books and animation. The individual chapters deploy multidisciplinary critical frameworks and discuss physical and mental illness. Through reading this book you will gain an understanding of the complex contribution illness narratives make to contemporary culture and the emergent field of Critical Medical Humanities.

37.95 In Stock
Illness as Many Narratives: Arts, Medicine and Culture

Illness as Many Narratives: Arts, Medicine and Culture

by Stella Bolaki
Illness as Many Narratives: Arts, Medicine and Culture

Illness as Many Narratives: Arts, Medicine and Culture

by Stella Bolaki

Paperback(Reprint)

$37.95 
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Overview

Illness narratives have become a cultural phenomenon in the Western world. In what ways can they be seen to have aesthetic, ethical and political value? What do they reveal about experiences of illness, the relationship between the body and identity and the role of the arts in bearing witness to illness for people who are ill and those connected to them? How can they influence medicine, the arts and shape public understandings of health and illness? These questions and more are explored in Illness as Many Narratives, which contains readings of a rich array of representations of illness from the 1980s to the present. A wide range of arts and media are considered such as life writing, photography, performance, film, theatre, artists’ books and animation. The individual chapters deploy multidisciplinary critical frameworks and discuss physical and mental illness. Through reading this book you will gain an understanding of the complex contribution illness narratives make to contemporary culture and the emergent field of Critical Medical Humanities.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781474425582
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Publication date: 08/01/2017
Edition description: Reprint
Pages: 264
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 9.20(h) x 0.70(d)

About the Author

Dr Stella Bolaki is Senior Lecturer in American Literature in the School of English at the University of Kent. She is the author of Unsettling the Bildungsroman: Reading Contemporary Ethnic American Women’s Fiction (Rodopi, 2011) and the co-editor, with Chris Gair of Disability and the American Counterculture, a special issue of the Journal of Literary & Cultural Disability Studies (forthcoming, 2015), co-editor, with Sabine Broeck, of Audre Lorde's Transnational Legacies (University of Massachusetts Press, forthcoming, 2015), and co-editor, with Derek Ryan, of Contradictory Woolf: Selected Papers from the Twenty-first Annual International Virginia Woolf Conference (Clemson UniversityDigital Press, 2012).

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements; Introduction: Illness as Many Narratives; 1. Re-Covering Scarred Bodies: Reading Photography; 2. Artists’ Books in the Medical Community; 3. Performance Medicine and Radical Pedagogy; 4. Collaborative Film as Terminal Care; 5. Messy Confrontations: Theatre and Expert Knowledge; 6. Animated Documentary and Mental Health; Afterword: #Illness; Bibliography; Index.

What People are Saying About This

Illness as Many Narratives intervenes in recent debates on the shape and direction of the medical humanities, and is at the forefront of a new emphasis on critical as opposed to instrumental or worse (!) "feel good" approaches. Stella Bolaki opens up the category "illness narrative" with smart and lucid readings of a wide variety of texts and performances not usually brought under the sign "illness narrative."

Lisa Diedrich

Illness as Many Narratives intervenes in recent debates on the shape and direction of the medical humanities, and is at the forefront of a new emphasis on critical as opposed to instrumental or worse (!) "feel good" approaches. Stella Bolaki opens up the category "illness narrative" with smart and lucid readings of a wide variety of texts and performances not usually brought under the sign "illness narrative."

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