edited by Ruth Nadelhaft ; with Victoria Bonebakker.
Honolulu :
Published for the Biographical Research Center by the University of Hawai'i Press,
2008.
1 online resource (xii, 659 pages)
"A Biography monograph."
Includes bibliographical references (pages 640-656) and index.
The intersection of wisdom and science is the territory of this anthology--ground that is contested, sometimes harrowing, and often ennobling. The human experience of health care, whether ancient or modern, has always engaged those who practice it and those who encounter it as patients. Both those who live with illness of body and mind, and those who live and work alongside the patients, crave the opportunity to reflect on their experiences. In recent years, practitioners and patients alike have called attention to a crisis in our collective experience of medicine. There is a growing awareness of very different cultural expectations about the nature and treatment of illness. The intersection of medicine and the humanities is busy. Machinery seems to crowd the space, while human encounters are often brief and deeply unsatisfying to patients and caregivers alike. Despite disparate approaches to the crisis in health care--from economics to ethics--there is agreement that patients and the world of medicine need more time together, so that illness does not find expression only in the context of the emergency room. It is as a response to the collective sense of crisis and alienation that Imagine What It's Like has been constructed. Inside and outside the health care community, many have called for the chance to use the humanities not only as opportunities to reflect on their own experiences, but also as a means of improving the experiences of all of us whose lives will be touched by illness and healing, birth and death. Created by the Maine Humanities Council for its Literature and Medicine: Humanities at the Heart of Health Care programs, Imagine What It's Like contains eighty-three selections ranging from poems to short stories to excerpts from longer works. The selections are divided into five sections--The Experience of Illness, Beginnings and Endings, Trauma and Recovery, Coming to Terms, and Healing Costs--and are followed by suggestions for longer readings.
JSTOR
22573/ctt62t2gb
Imagine what it's like.
0824833171
Medicine, Literary collections.
Medicine in Literature.
LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES-- Composition & Creative Writing.
LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES-- Rhetoric.
MEDICAL-- General.
Medicine.
REFERENCE-- Writing Skills.
LAN-- 005000
LAN-- 015000
MED000000
REF-- 026000
808
.
8/03561
22
PN6071
.
M38
I43
2008eb
WZ
5
I31
2008
Bonebakker, Victoria.
Nadelhaft, Ruth L.,1938-
University of Hawaii at Manoa., Biographical Research Center.