ABSTRACT

Medicine, Health and Being Human begins a conversation to explore how the medical has defined us: that is, the ways in which perspectives of medicine and health have affected cultural understandings of what it means to be human.

With chapters that span from the early modern period through to the contemporary world, and are drawn from a range of disciplines, this volume holds that incremental historical and cultural influences have brought about an understanding of humanity in which the medical is ingrained, consciously or unconsciously, usually as a mode of legitimisation. Divided into three parts, the book follows a narrative path from the integrity of the human soul, through to the integrity of the material human body, then finally brought together through engaging with end-of-life responses. Part 1 examines the move from spirituality to psychiatry in terms of the way medical science has influenced cultural understandings of the mind. Part 2 interrogates the role that medicine has played in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries in constructing and deconstructing the self and other, including the fusion of visual objectivity and the scientific gaze in constructing perceptions of humanity. Part 3 looks at the limits of medicine when the integrity of one body breaks down. It contends with the ultimate question of the extent to which humanity is confined within the integrity of the human body, and how medicine and the humanities work together toward responding to the finality of death.

This is a valuable contribution for all those interested in the medical humanities, history of medicine, history of ideas and the social approaches to health and illness.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

Medicine and modernity

part I|76 pages

Situating the soul, self and mind

chapter 1|14 pages

Physicians and the soul

Medicine and spirituality in seventeenth-century England

chapter 2|13 pages

Hearing differently

Medical, modern and medieval approaches to sound

chapter 4|15 pages

Soul searching

Psychiatry’s influence on selfhood

chapter 5|14 pages

Faith in healing

Evidence-based medicine, the placebo effect and Afro-Brazilian healing rituals 1

part II|88 pages

Socio-medical narratives

chapter 6|14 pages

Voices in medicine

Ethics, human rights and medical experimentation

chapter 8|16 pages

Negotiating wonders

Medical-triggered redefinitions of humanity in popular fiction

chapter 9|25 pages

The human ideal and the real

Artistic vision and anatomical sight

part III|74 pages

Limits of medical intervention

chapter 11|15 pages

The fairytale narratives of plastic surgery makeover TV shows in South Korea

Surgical metamorphosis, the “surgical gaze,” and the permeability of medical knowledge

chapter 12|14 pages

“John-o is interested in cutting up whatever he finds at the limits of life”

Monstrous anatomies and the production of the human body in Alasdair Gray’s Poor Things and Hilary Mantel’s The Giant, O’Brien

chapter 13|15 pages

In Lady Delacour’s shadow

Women patients and breast cancer in short fiction

chapter 14|14 pages

“My lawful wife and mistress”

A physician’s perspective

chapter 15|14 pages

A humanistic perspective on the healing power of language at the end of life

Restoration of the self through words and silence 1