“I am the Author and Must Take Full Responsibility”: Abraham Verghese, Physicians as the Storytellers of the Body, and the Renewal of Medicine

Journal of Medical Humanities 37 (4):389-399 (2016)
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Abstract

Abraham Verghese proposes to renew medicine by training physicians to read the right texts—literary fiction and patients' bodies—with skilled attention. Analyzing Verghese's proposal with reference to Foucault's idea of the "clinical gaze," I find that Verghese conceives of patients as texts that only physicians can read, meaning that physicians become the storytellers of the bodies, lives, and deaths of the people they meet as patients. I conclude that Verghese's project is unsustainable and alternatively propose thinking analogically of physicians as ship captains who maintain therapeutic distance to reopen interpretative spaces for communities outside of medicine.

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Why Teach Literature and Medicine? Answers from Three Decades.Anne Hudson Jones - 2013 - Journal of Medical Humanities 34 (4):415-428.
Calling.Stephen David Ross - 2009 - International Studies in Philosophy Monograph Series:197-247.
The Death of Ivan Illich.[author unknown] - 2003 - The Chesterton Review 29 (4):597-600.

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