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OverviewWhat does it mean to have a heart? How does it feel when a heart fails, and what does it take to recover? In a world beset by never-ending crises-personal and collective, local and global-is heartlessness the only option? From the Heart weaves together a personal narrative of a life-threatening ailment with considerations of philosophy, art, and science to contemplate ultimate questions: matters of life and death. Jeffrey L. Kosky recounts his brush with death-the surgical repair of a congenital defect in his aortic valve-his gradual recovery of everyday life, and his struggle to find the heart to go on throughout it all. To make sense of the experience, he immerses himself in humanistic inquiry and medical science-the histories of medicine, cardiac surgery, and knowledge of the human heart as well as the works of artists, writers, philosophers, and theologians. Writing about the experience of being human from the precarious position of his own woundedness, Kosky shares hard-earned perspectives on what matters most. Combining moving memoir, encounters with major authors and artists, and heartfelt reflections on the ""big questions"" of existence, this elegantly written book is at once erudite and powerful. It shows us why the heart-in physical, emotional, and metaphorical senses-helps us come to terms with sickness and health, dying and living. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Jeffrey L. KoskyPublisher: Columbia University Press Imprint: Columbia University Press ISBN: 9780231217644ISBN 10: 0231217641 Pages: 344 Publication Date: 25 February 2025 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsPreface The Beginning: It’s Hard to Have a Heart After the Fact Part I: Book of My Heart 1. The Heart I Call Mine 2. Producing the Heart: A History of the Surgery That Gave Me a Future On the Slaughter in the Operating Room of History 3. Conceiving the Heart: A Pump at the Heart of Me 4. Listen to Your Heart: A Cure? Cured of the Cure: Speak to Your Heart 5. “Up with You Now, Come On, My Old Heart!” Part II: Having a Heart Is a Chronic Condition 6. The Heart’s Imperative 7. Put Your Heart in It 8. Heartfelt The End . . . and Dream On Notes IndexReviewsIn From the Heart, Kosky uses his own experience with aortic valve replacement to connect the strange and instrumental world of medicine with the variety of ways the metaphorical heart has shown up in our attempts to explore the mystery and meaning of life. From the Heart will resonate with people who have gone through life-threatening injuries and illnesses, but I also hope that medical providers will read this book to better understand their patients' experiences. -- Raymond Barfield MD, PhD, author of <i>Wager: Beauty, Suffering, and Being in the World</i> Jeffrey Kosky has written a book unlike any other I know. In this meditation on having, losing, and regaining his heart, he sometimes wears his heart on his sleeve, sometimes scrutinizes it from a distance. He tells a philosophical story that creates a space in which you, too, can meditate on what happens to your heart for as long as it beats, until it stops. -- Lars Svendsen, author of <i>A Philosophy of Hope</i> Koskys discussion incorporates the history of open-heart surgery, literature, artwork featuring the heart, theology, and plenty of philosophy. Ideas put forth by Descartes, Nietzsche, Saint Augustine, John Calvin, Karl Ove Knausgaard, and Thoreau are emphasized in Koskys pensive look at lifesaving treatment, lingering anxiety, and the knowledge that there are no guarantees when it comes to health and longevity. * Booklist * Jeffrey L. Kosky has a congenitally hurt heart. When that hurt became acute, surgery saved him—but for how long, and to what end? He engages those questions with a blend of intimacy and unsparing introspection that recalls Augustine’s Confessions. Have you, like me, survived heart surgery? This is a book for us. And even if you haven’t, it will do your heart a world of good. -- Jack Miles, Pulitzer Prize–winning author of <i>God: A Biography</i> With a seasoned humanist’s eye, and with a serious cardiac condition of his own, Kosky looks at the heart’s intimate mechanics and morphology, as well as its symbolism in religion, literature, philosophy, and the arts. The result is an exquisite, unique, haunting book. Humanistic scholarship at its best—and most heartbreakingly personal. -- Costica Bradatan, author of <i>In Praise of Failure: Four Lessons in Humility</i> In From the Heart, Kosky uses his own experience with aortic valve replacement to connect the strange and instrumental world of medicine with the variety of ways the metaphorical heart has shown up in our attempts to explore the mystery and meaning of life. From the Heart will resonate with people who have gone through life-threatening injuries and illnesses, but I also hope that medical providers will read this book to better understand their patients' experiences. -- Raymond Barfield, MD, PhD, author of <i>Wager: Beauty, Suffering, and Being in the World</i> Kosky has written a book unlike any other I know. In this meditation on having, losing, and regaining his heart, he sometimes wears his heart on his sleeve, sometimes scrutinizes it from a distance. He tells a philosophical story that creates a space in which you, too, can meditate on what happens to your heart for as long as it beats, until it stops. -- Lars Svendsen, author of <i>A Philosophy of Hope</i> Author InformationJeffrey L. Kosky is professor of religion at Washington & Lee University. His books include Arts of Wonder: Enchanting Secularity (2013). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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