ABSTRACT

This book explores rhetorical ethos and its ongoing role in patients’ credibility and in misdiagnoses stemming from gender, race and class-based biases. Drawing on the concept of ethos as a theoretical framework, it explores health and mental illness across different conditions and across different methodological approaches.

Extending work on ethos in clinical encounters and public discourse about biomedicine and presenting new research on the rhetoric of mental health, stigma and mental illness, the book explores how bias in clinical settings can lead to symptoms labelled "in the patient’s head" masking treatable medical problems.

This notable contribution to the rhetoric of health and medicine will be of interest to all researchers and graduate students of rhetoric and composition studies, rhetoric of health and medicine, disability studies, medical humanities, communication, and psychology.

chapter 3|45 pages

Contested Diagnoses and Ethos

How Patients Push Back When Care Providers Misdiagnose Somatic Symptoms

chapter 4|21 pages

Phantom Limb Pain and Tacit Appeals to Ethos

When Patients’ Self-Knowledge Exceeds Existing Clinical Knowledge and Predicts Future Clinical Findings

chapter 5|30 pages

Recuperative Ethos and Agile Epistemologies in Mental Health and Beyond

Toward a Vernacular Engagement in Mental Health Ontologies 1

chapter 6|15 pages

Conclusion

Toward a Methodology for Studying Everyday Ethos in Clinical Settings