Latin American and Iberian Perspectives on Literature and Medicine

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Ana Rosa
Ancient Greece
Anne W. Gilfoil
Artificial Satellite
Asthmatic Crisis
Beach Birds
bioethics in literature
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Comparative Literature
Contemporary Historical Fictions
cultural pathology
Danses Macabres
Debra D. Andrist
Devil's Apple
Disability
disability studies
Dominic Moran
Eau De Cologne
El Adelantado
El Arquitecto
Elizabeth A. Marchant
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Fin De Siglo
Guillermina De Ferrari
Health
Iberian
Illness
interdisciplinary illness representation
Jorge Luis Borges
La Correspondencia De
Latin American
Literature
Literature and Medicine
Los Detectives Salvajes
Los Premios
Lost Steps
Lusophone
medical humanities
Medicine
Montserrat Lunati
neuroscience in fiction
Nineteenth Century Spain
Olivia Vuez-Medina
pathography analysis
Placenta Accreta
Post-operative Delirium
Research
Rocio Rodtjer
Santa Fe De Bogota
Spanish Science
Suzanne Black
Tolu Balsam
Undergoing Breast Cancer Treatment
War Time
William Rowlandson
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367871390
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 10 Dec 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This is the first study to examine the representation of illness, disability, and cultural pathologies in modern and contemporary Iberian and Latin American literature. Innovative and interdisciplinary, the collection situates medicine as an important and largely overlooked discourse in these literatures, while also considering the social, political, religious, symbolic, and metaphysical dimensions underpinning illness. Investigating how Hispanic and Lusophone writers have reflected on the personal and cultural effects of illness, it raises central questions about how medical discourses, cultural pathologies, and the art of healing in general are represented. Essays pay particular attention to the ways in which these interdisciplinary dialogues chart new directions in the study of Hispanic and Lusophone cultures, and emerging disciplines such as the medical humanities. Addressing a wide range of themes and subjects including bioethics, neuroscience, psychosurgery, medical technologies, Darwinian evolution, indigenous herbal medicine, the rising genre of the pathography, and the ‘illness as metaphor’ trope, the collection engages with the discourses of cultural studies, gender studies, disability studies, comparative literature, and the medical humanities. This book enriches and stimulates scholarship in these areas by showing how much we still have to gain from interdisciplinary studies working at the intersections between the humanities and the sciences.

Patricia Novillo-Corvalán is Lecturer in Comparative Literature at the University of Kent at Canterbury, UK.