At the Interface/Probing the Boundaries seeks to encourage and promote cutting edge interdisciplinary and multi-disciplinary projects and inquiry. By bringing people together from differing context, disciplines, professions, and vocations, the aim is to engage in conversations that are innovative, imaginative, and creative interactive. -- By sharing cross-disciplinary insights and perspectives, ATI/PTB publications are designed to be both exploratory examinations of particular areas and issues, and rigorous inquiries into specific subjects. Books in the series are enabling resources which will encourage sustained and creative dialogue, and become the future resource for further inquiries and research. --Book Jacket Inter-Disciplinary dialogue enables people to go beyond the boundaries of what they usually encounter and share in perspectives that are new, challenging, and richly rewarding. This kind of dialogue often illuminates one's own area of work, is suggestive of new possibilities for development, and creates exciting horizons for future conversations with persons from a wide variety of national and international settings. -- Preliminary Material --Acknowledgements --The Search for Meaning in Modern Medicine /Deborah Kirklin --Dialogue and Creativity -- Narrative in the Clinical Encounter /Jan C. Frich --Clinical Tales and the Artlike Creativity of the Body /Drude von der Fehr --Signs of Illness /Vincent Colapietro --From The Day I Wasn't There /Hélène Cixous --The Blue Chair A Literary Report on Dementia in America /Frederik Tygstrup --Henri Michaux in Search of his Tempo, or Great Health /Gérard Danou --Tolstoy and the Making of the Inhuman /Knut Stene-Johansen --Treatment Politics: The Rise of Radesyge Hospitals in Norway /Anne Kveim Lie --Metaphors, Figures and Description in Sénac's Traité de la structure du coeur, de son action et de ses maladies (1749) /Eric Hamraouï --Who's Afraid of Amalie Skram? Hysteria and Rebellion in Amalie Skram's Novels of Mental Hospitals /Hilde Bondevik --Like a High Black Wave Jørgen Stein and the Spanish Flu /Mette Kia Krabbe Meyer --Pathogenesis: Life, Literature and Animality Medical Theory and Biological Nihilism in Eighteenth-Century Thought /Johan Redin --Note on the Contributors. This book is a contribution to humanistic studies of illness. Medical humanities are by nature cross-disciplinary, and in recent years studies in this field have been recognized as a platform for dialogue between the "two cultures" of the natural sciences and the humanities. Illness in Context is a result of an encounter of several disciplines, including medicine, history and literature. The main stress is on the literary perspectives of the interdisciplinary collaboration. The reading practices highlighting the clinical, phenomenological and archeological approaches to illness take as their point of departure the living text, that is, the literary experience mediated and created by the text. Literature is seen not solely as a medium for the representation of experiences of illness, but also as a historical praxis involved in the forging of our common understanding of illness. In contrast to traditional literary analysis - primarily oriented toward the interpretation of the literary work's meaning - the project will emphasize description and understanding of how literature itself performs as a means of interpretation of reality. The target group for this book comprises professionals in the various disciplines, and students of health and culture. The ambition is to contribute to teaching in humanistic illness research, and function as a topical resource book that formulates controversial problems in the crucial meeting of medicine and the humanities. --
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