Summary:
Brian Dolan has done a great service for the field of
medical humanities through his efforts in putting together this volume. Its 19
reprinted articles cover the spectrum of disciplines/fields/methodologies that
anchor our work: history, literature,
film, theater, arts, narrative, storytelling, critical (disability) studies, human
values, and professionalism. His opening essay, “One Hundred Years of Medical
Humanities: A Thematic Overview” very pertinently and extremely ably sets the
stage for the remainder of the book. Quite helpfully, authors of “recently
published articles,” in this instance from 1987 on, were asked “to reflect on
their piece and add introductory comments that would help frame it, or enable
them to address issues raised since its original publication” (p.167). To the reader’s benefit, almost all of those
contemporary authors did so. As cited on
the book’s back cover, the work of some
of our field’s most important educators are in this volume, including
contributions from Erwin Ackernecht, Gretchen Case, Rita Charon, Jack Coulehan,
Thomas Couser, Lester Friedman, Kathryn Montgomery Hunter, Paul Ulhaus
Macneill, Guy Micco, Martha Montello, Edmund Pellegrino, Suzanne Poirier,
Johanna Shapiro, Abraham Verghese, and Delese Wear.
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