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OverviewThis new volume repositions narrative medicine and trauma studies in a global context with a particular focus on ethics. Trauma is a rapidly growing field of especially literary and cultural studies, and the ways in which trauma has asserted its relevance across disciplines, which intersect with narrative medicine, and how it has come to widen the scope of narrative research and medical practice constitute the principal concerns of this volume. This collection brings together contributions from established and emerging scholars coming from a wide range of academic fields within the faculty of humanities that include literary and media studies, psychology, philosophy, history, anthropology as well as medical education and health care studies. This crossing of disciplines is also represented by the collaboration between the two editors. Most of the authors in the volume use narrative medicine to refer to the methodology pioneered by Rita Charon and her colleagues at Columbia University, but in some chapters, the authors use it to refer to other methodologies and pedagogies utilizing that descriptor. Trauma is today understood both in the restricted sense in which it is used in the mental health field and in its more widespread, popular usage in literature. This collection aspires to prolong, deepen, and advance the field of narrative medicine in two important aspects: by bringing together both the cultural and the clinical side of trauma and by opening the investigation to a truly global horizon. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Anders Juhl Rasmussen , Morten SodemannPublisher: Vernon Press Imprint: Vernon Press Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.60cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.413kg ISBN: 9798881901769Pages: 306 Publication Date: 05 December 2024 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsFirst, the volume is inclusive in scope, in conscious resistance to the acknowledged tendency of narrative medicine, historically speaking, to emerge (albeit reactively) in relation to a Western medical model. The scope of the volume is diverse: geopolitically (encompassing Asia, Australia, Europe, Middle East, North America); methodologically and theoretically (exploring narrative forms - oral, filmic/televisual, performative as well as written - and their relation to personal, socio-cultural, historical and political experiences and contexts); and in terms of the disciplines it incorporates (health care, history, literature, media studies, medicine, psychology, and philosophy) and the perspectives it embraces (those of patient, practitioner, writer/creator, reader/witness). Second, and relatedly, the volume is cognisant of recent criticism of narrative medicine as tending to overlook: (i) the degree to which individual stories are vulnerable to being ignored, excluded, or silenced (for people living with disability or survivors of sexual abuse or cultural oppression, for example); and (ii) how story-telling is not the only, and often not the most available, form of expression. Through the inclusivity of (often highly individualised) voices and the identification of concepts such as 'narrative audibility' ('the complex of what stories get heard and what can be told'), the volume is situated as representing ""critical"" narrative medicine to a significant degree, making it an important contribution to the field. These advances are possible as a result of the central aim of the volume: to position narrative medicine in relation to trauma and ethical studies on the well-founded basis that they are natural allies. As trauma is 'an unspeakable or untellable event' paradoxically in need (therapeutically) of expression, so narrative medicine promises an ethical bearing of witness to traumatic experience when personal articulation is bearable. The result epistemologically is that one domain of rather broad definition (narrative medicine) is encountering another area of study (trauma) that is similarly (and properly) porous, such that the coverage tests the limits of coherence somewhat. The division into three sections (Autoethnography, Care, Aesthetic Narrative) is helpful however and the (excellent and challenging) afterword, insisting that narrative medicine be a practice of respect (in relation to the story and the readiness of is subject to tell it) makes clear that the volume is intended to keep open rather than close down vibrant debate. Professor Josie Billington Department of English Co-Lead, Arts, Mental Health and Wellbeing Theme, Centre for Health, Arts, Society & Environment CHASE University of Liverpool Author InformationAnders Juhl Rasmussen. Associate professor, University of Copenhagen, Denmark. MA in Danish and Philosophy, and PhD in Danish literature. Associate professor in Danish literature with research obligations in narrative medicine at Department of Nordic Studies and Linguistics, University of Copenhagen. Member of the steering committee for Nordic Network for Narratives in Medicine and CHCI Medical and Health Humanities Network. First editor of the anthology ""Narrative Medicine in Education, Practice, and Interventions"" (Anthem Press, 2021), and author of several articles and chapters on narrative medicine. Morten Sodemann. Clinical professor, University of Southern Denmark, Denmark. MA, PhD, consultant physician in infectious diseases. Clinical professor in global health and immigrant medicine, Department of Clinical Medicine, University of Southern Denmark. Chief physician, Clinic for Immigrant Medicine, Odense University Hospital. Author of ""What you do not know, will hurt the patient"" (Open Access, 2020) and several articles and chapters on narrative medicine. 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