Illness as Narrative

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4.9/5.0
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Product Details
Price
$51.75
Publisher
University of Pittsburgh Press
Publish Date
Pages
192
Dimensions
5.9 X 9.0 X 0.6 inches | 0.66 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9780822961901
BISAC Categories:

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About the Author
Ann Jurecic is assistant professor of English at Rutgers University.
Reviews
Ann Jurecic opens a door. The light that spills through that newly opened door illuminates not just illness and/as narrative but why we read, why we write, and what stories are for. Jurecic nails what is at stake here--truth, intersubjectivity, relation, mortality, and freedom. What a voice. What a vision. What a challenge this book is to literary criticism, to medical practice, to all of us who bleed and yet live.-- "Rita Charon, Columbia University"
There is no greater term of scholarly disparagement than 'therapeutic.' Jurecic's eloquent defense of therapeutic literature is as necessary and humane as the misunderstood illness narrative itself. Promoting mindful listening and sympathetic understanding, this gutsy and levelheaded book performs its own reparative work, restoring care and concern, recognition and response, attention and acknowledgement, healing and hope to our critical lexicon.-- "Diana Fuss, Princeton University"
"lllness as Narrative is an innovative work that provides an exemplary model of productive ways to read, interpret, and (by extension) teach literature (autobiography, essays, cultural analyses, fiction, poetry, and blogs) by and about real people with real diseases and disabilities."-- "Lynn Z. Bloom, University of Connecticut"
Ann Jurecic's readings of Sontag, Fadiman, Sedgwick, and Latour carve new pathways between literary theory and illness narratives. Illness as Narrative will refresh your vision, draw you to new texts, and help you teach.-- "Maura Spiegel, coauthor of The Grim Reader"
Offers substantive confirmation of the continuing scholarly trends in support of the genre of narrative medicine and for the primary value of the patient's voice in the practice of medicine. . . . Jurecic is a mindful reader and she successfully provides a succinctly written arc of the emergence of illness narratives in the twentieth century. . . . A must read for all Literature and Medicine courses and certainly will be added to Medical Humanities programs around the country.-- "All Heart Matters"