Pedagogy and the Art of Death: Reparative Readings of Death and Dying in Margaret Edson’s Wit

Journal of Medical Humanities 39 (3):325-336 (2018)
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Abstract

Wit explores modes of reading representations of death and dying, both through the play’s sustained engagement with Donne’s Holy Sonnets and through Vivian’s self-reflexive approach to her illness and death. I argue that the play dramatizes reparative readings, a term coined by Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick to describe an alternative to the paranoid reading practices that have come to dominate literary criticism. By analyzing the play’s reparative readings of death and dying, I show how Wit provides lessons about knowledge-making and reading practices in the field of health humanities.

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Uses of literature.Rita Felski - 2008 - Oxford: Blackwell.
Wit, Pride, and the Resurrection. Sykes - 2003 - Renascence 55 (2):163-174.
Begin with a Text: Teaching the Poetics of Medicine. [REVIEW]Catherine Belling - 2013 - Journal of Medical Humanities 34 (4):481-491.

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