ABSTRACT

Narratives have always played a prominent role in both bioethics and medicine; the fields have attracted much storytelling, ranging from great literature to humbler stories of sickness and personal histories. And all bioethicists work with cases--from court cases that shape policy matters to case studies that chronicle sickness. But how useful are these various narratives for sorting out moral matters? What kind of ethical work can stories do--and what are the limits to this work? The new essays in Stories and Their Limits offer insightful reflections on the relationship between narratives and ethics.

part 1|88 pages

Telling the Patient's Story

chapter 2|13 pages

Who Gets to Tell the Story?

Narrative in Postmodern Bioethics

chapter 3|19 pages

Enacting Illness Stories

When, What, and Why

chapter 5|24 pages

Nice Story, But So What?

Narrative and Justification in Ethics

part 2|61 pages

Reading Narratives of Illness

chapter 6|22 pages

The Ethical Dimensions of Literature

Henry James's The Wings of the Dove

chapter 7|10 pages

Film and Narrative in Bioethics

Akira Kurosawa's Ikiru

chapter 8|11 pages

Perplexed about Narrative Ethics

chapter 9|16 pages

Bioethics' Consensus on Method

Who Could Ask for Anything More?

part 3|62 pages

Literary Criticism in the Clinic

chapter 12|13 pages

Narrative Competence

chapter 13|15 pages

Toward a Bioethics for the Twenty-First Century

A Ricoeurian Poststructuralist Narrative Hermeneutic Approach to Informed Consent

part 4|59 pages

Narratives Invoked

chapter 14|17 pages

Aphorisms, Maxims, and Old Saws

Narrative Rationality and the Negotiation of Clinical Choice

chapter 15|6 pages

The Moral of the Story

chapter 16|14 pages

Medical Humanities

Pyramids and Rhomboids in the Rationalist World of Medicine

chapter 17|20 pages

Narrative(s) Versus Norm(s)

A Misplaced Debate in Bioethics