In Private Bodies, Public Texts, Karla FC Holloway examines instances where medical issues and information that would usually be seen as intimate, private matters are forced into the public sphere. As she demonstrates, the resulting social dramas often play out on the bodies of women and African Americans. Holloway discusses the spectacle of the Terri Schiavo right-to-die case and the injustice of medical researchers use of Henrietta Lackss cell line without her or her familys knowledge or permission. She offers a provocative reading of the Tuskegee syphilis study and a haunting account of the ethical dilemmas that confronted physicians, patients, and families when a hospital became a space for dying rather than healing during Hurricane Katrina; even at that dire moment, race mattered. Private Bodies, Public Texts is a compelling call for a cultural bioethics that attends to the historical and social factors that render some populations more vulnerable than others in medical and legal contexts. Holloway proposes literature as a conceptual anchor for discussions of race, gender, bioethics, and the right to privacy. Literary narratives can accommodate thick description, multiple subjectivities, contradiction, and complexity.
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Product Details
Weight: 386g
Publication Date: 14 Mar 2011
Publisher: Duke University Press
Publication City/Country: United States
Language: English
ISBN13: 9780822349174
About Karla FC Holloway
Karla FC Holloway is James B. Duke Professor of English at Duke University where she also holds appointments in the Law School Womens Studies and African & African American Studies and is an affiliated faculty with the Institute on Care at the End of Life and the Trent Center for Bioethics Humanities & History of Medicine. She serves on the Greenwall Foundations Advisory Board in Bioethics was recently elected to the Hastings Center Fellows Association and is the author of many books including BookMarks: Reading in Black and White; Passed On: African American Mourning Stories: A Memorial also published by Duke University Press; and Codes of Conduct: Race Ethics and the Color of Our Character.