Studies in English/Studies in English Honors: Literature and Medicine
This course is aimed at anyone who wants to think about health and medicine in terms of story-telling.
Clearly medicine involves the body, with all of its biological and chemical processes--this is sometimes called “evidence-based medicine.” This model is a central starting point for good medical practice. But we will consider the many ways that medical matters are also stories, what some theorists call “narrative-based medicine.” So in studying the forms of fiction you will be engaged in very similar practices to those that make up medical life: telling, hearing and interpreting stories are skills that link medical and literary practice.
We will be approaching this project in two major ways.
First, we will look at representations of disease, or things that are often labeled as a disease, with an eye towards how health or disease is always placed—how it always has cultural meanings. Neurodiversity, Disability, Race, Addictions, AIDS, Queer issues, Depression, Abortion, Death—we will read short stories, novels, poems, and other narrative accounts that help us understand the experience of these and other often-medicalized conditions within personal and social history. Literature makes vivid how much medicine is a part of society, and how much both disease and healing have cultural as well as scientific aspects. This is not an attempt to “un-medicalize” all of these matters, so much as to stretch our sense of what medicine includes, and how medical stories come into contact with non-medical stories.
Second, we will consider how patients and doctors can better understand disease if they consider it through literary categories like frame, time, plot, and desire. We will have several units that consider the usefulness of narrative theory in imagining medical practice—in reading case histories, in engaging in diagnostic interchanges, in doing medical research. Ultimately, patients and their healers only exist in narrative frameworks. We will be drawing on “vignettes” (short case studies) and narrative theory from a recent collection, Literature and Medicine: A Practical and Pedagogical Guide, by the literary theorist Ronald Schliefer and the physician Jerry B. Vannatta.
The authors we will read include Arthur Kleinman, Grace Paley, Harriet Washington, Arthur Conan Doyle, Abraham Verghese, Mark Haddon, James Joyce, Raymond Carver, James Baldwin, Alice Munro, Ernest Hemingway, Gwendolyn Brooks, Maya Angelou, Salman Rushdie, Tillie Olsen, William Carlos Williams, H.G. Wells, Leo Tolstoy, and Paul Lyons. You will write discussion posts and two papers and give a presentation.