Drawing on the expertise of historical, literary and philosophical scholarship, practicing physicians, and the medical humanities this is a true interdisciplinary collaboration, styled as a history. It explores pain at the intersection of the living, suffering body, and the discursive cultural webs that entangle it in its specific moment.
Drawing on the expertise of historical, literary and philosophical scholarship, practicing physicians, and the medical humanities this is a true interdisciplinary collaboration, styled as a history. It explores pain at the intersection of the living, suffering body, and the discursive cultural webs that entangle it in its specific moment.
David Biro, SUNY Downstate Medical Center, USA Joanna Bourke, Birkbeck College, UK James Burnham Sedgwick, Acadia University, Canada Sheena Culley, Kingston University, UK Liz Gray, Queen Mary University of London, UK Daniel Grey, Plymouth University, UK Javier Moscoso, Spanish National Research Council Linda Raphael, George Washington University, USA Danny Rees, Wellcome Library, UK Paolo Santangelo, Sapienza University of Rome, Italy Noemi Tousignant, University of Cambridge, UK Johanna Willenfelt, University of Cumbria, UK Wilfried Witte, Charité University Clinic of Berlin, Germany Whitney Wood, Wilfrid Laurier University in Waterloo, Canada
Inhaltsangabe
1. Introduction: Hurt Feelings?; Rob Boddice 2. Exquisite and Lingering Pains: Facing Cancer in Early Modern Europe; Javier Moscoso 3. The Perception of Pain in Late?Imperial China; Paolo Santangelo 4. Psychological Pain: Metaphor or Reality?; David Biro 5. Phantom Suffering: Amputees, Stump Pain, and Phantom Sensations from the Eighteenth Century to the Present; Joanna Bourke 6. The Emergence of Chronic Pain: Phantom Limbs, Subjective Experience and Pain Management in Post-war West Germany; Wilfried Witte 7. A Quantity of Suffering: Measuring Pain as Emotion in the Mid-twentieth century United States; Noemi Tousignant 8. Killing Pain: Aspirin, Emotion and Subjectivity; Sheena Culley 9. Body, Mind and Madness: Pain in Animals in Nineteenth-Century Comparative Psychology; Liz Gray 10. Down in the Mouth: Faces of Pain; Danny Rees 11. 'When I think of what is before me, I feel afraid': Narratives of Fear, Pain, and Childbirth in Late-Victorian Canada; Whitney Wood 12. 'The agony of despair': Pain and the Cultural Script of Infanticide in England and Wales, 1860-1960; Daniel Grey 13. Imagining Another's Pain: Privilege and Limitation in Parent and Child Relations; Linda Raphael 14. Observing Pain, Pain in Observing: Collateral Emotions in International Justice; James Burnham Sedgwick 15. Documenting Bodies: Pain Surfaces; Johanna Willenfelt
1. Introduction: Hurt Feelings?; Rob Boddice 2. Exquisite and Lingering Pains: Facing Cancer in Early Modern Europe; Javier Moscoso 3. The Perception of Pain in Late?Imperial China; Paolo Santangelo 4. Psychological Pain: Metaphor or Reality?; David Biro 5. Phantom Suffering: Amputees, Stump Pain, and Phantom Sensations from the Eighteenth Century to the Present; Joanna Bourke 6. The Emergence of Chronic Pain: Phantom Limbs, Subjective Experience and Pain Management in Post-war West Germany; Wilfried Witte 7. A Quantity of Suffering: Measuring Pain as Emotion in the Mid-twentieth century United States; Noemi Tousignant 8. Killing Pain: Aspirin, Emotion and Subjectivity; Sheena Culley 9. Body, Mind and Madness: Pain in Animals in Nineteenth-Century Comparative Psychology; Liz Gray 10. Down in the Mouth: Faces of Pain; Danny Rees 11. 'When I think of what is before me, I feel afraid': Narratives of Fear, Pain, and Childbirth in Late-Victorian Canada; Whitney Wood 12. 'The agony of despair': Pain and the Cultural Script of Infanticide in England and Wales, 1860-1960; Daniel Grey 13. Imagining Another's Pain: Privilege and Limitation in Parent and Child Relations; Linda Raphael 14. Observing Pain, Pain in Observing: Collateral Emotions in International Justice; James Burnham Sedgwick 15. Documenting Bodies: Pain Surfaces; Johanna Willenfelt
Rezensionen
"In Pain and Emotion in Modern History, Rob Boddice and his collaborators offer an illuminating and provocative study of the physical, psychological and emotional aspects of pain that historically structured medical interventions into physical distress and
shaped individual experiences." - The British Journal for the History of Science
"...an indispensable contribution to the increasing scholarship on the history of pain." - Social History of Medicine
"I would recommend anyone interested in the intersect between pain and emotion to go out and buy, beg or borrow a copy. Pain and Emotion in Modern History is an impressively researched must-read, presenting pain as a multifaceted, evolving, social, historical, physiological and psychological event to which we do not have, and may never have the answer." - Medical Humanities
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