According to the Arts

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Month: July 2019

T.B. Harlem

T.B. Harlem

What These Works Say

According to the art: Alice Neel’s painting portrays the illness experience of tuberculous (TB) in 1940, and also conveys social determinants (poverty, malnutrition) that puts populations at risk for illnesses such as TB.

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Is It All In Your Head?

Is It All In Your Head?

What These Works Say

According to the art: Through a series of astonishing case studies from her neurology practice, O’Sullivan shows what psychosomatic illness looks like and describes how it works. She avers that illnesses can arise from pathophysiological causes or psychosomatic mechanisms, and so diagnosticians should be sure to discern which is at work in any given case as much to prevent harm as to effect a cure.

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Elements of Illness

Elements of Illness

What I and Others Say

According to the art: Illness can be discerned in various ways, and in ways that correspond to how the Arts can address them. Here we list and discuss some elements of illness.

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Illness as Questions

Illness as Questions

What I and Others Say

According to the art: An element of illness takes the form of questions. The questions can be about the clinical course of a particular health problem or about how a person’s life plans need to be altered. Disfigurement and migraine are featured examples.

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Electricity

Electricity

What These Works Say

According to the art: This movie was created to render the seizure experience of people with epilepsy.; the storyline is secondary to this aim. It also shows how filmmaking can be effective in capturing the seizure experience in ways that other art forms cannot.

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We Are Not OurselvesA Family’s Trajectory, Denial, and Grace Amid Dementia

We Are Not Ourselves
A Family’s Trajectory, Denial, and Grace Amid Dementia

What These Works Say

According to the art: This novel covers a sixty–year span of a woman’s life and how the period during her husband’s early-onset Alzheimer’s disease affected the trajectory of her life as a spouse, a mother, a nurse, and a person with dreams and ambitions. Insights are offered on family relationships, daily life, and health care delivery and financing. How denial manifests and evolves is explored, and how grace can come to the fore is rendered.

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Dementia Experience:The Biomedical and the Literary (Mosley)

Dementia Experience:
The Biomedical and the Literary (Mosley)

Projects So That I Can Say More

According to the art: Here are excerpts from the novel The Days of Ptolemy Grey that extend or elaborate on classic biomedical explanations of what people experience with dementia.

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In the Land of Pain

In the Land of Pain

What These Works Say

According to the art: Alphonse Daudet was a nineteenth century French writer whose syphilis progressed to the late stages involving devastating neuropsychiatric effects. The book comprises notes he made about his experiences with pain, unsteadiness and paralysis, what chronic pain and illness does to personal outlooks, isolation, and relationships, and the pleasures and pains of morphine.

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Dementia Experience:The Biomedical and the Literary (Solnit)

Dementia Experience:
The Biomedical and the Literary (Solnit)

Projects So That I Can Say More

According to the art: Here are excerpts from a literary nonfiction book that extends and elaborates on classic biomedical explanations of what people experience with dementia.

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Recent Posts

  • Three Views of Death Throes in TB: Biomedical, Literary, Opera
  • The Room Next Door
    Best Friends Forever?
  • Lights, Camera, Deny
    When Managed Care Went to the Movies
  • This is a Test
    A Breezy Novel Warns of Damaging Winds
  • Of Doctors and Health Care
    Montaigne’s Harmony

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