Book review The Wounded Storyteller by Arthur
Download
Report
Transcript Book review The Wounded Storyteller by Arthur
BOOK REVIEW
THE WOUNDED
STORYTELLER
BY ARTHUR W. FRANK
By Tim Tran
What’s it about?
Spectrum of illness
Patients who have illness have stories to be told
These are important
Define who they are
Attempts to analyse this in a series of sociological/personal theories
of classification
REMISSION SOCIETY
Sontag’s metaphor: remission society
Illness vs. health
Dual citizenship
Visa status – constant periodic renewal
People who would have been dead to enjoy the living world but
always subject to expulsion
“Fear comes and goes as a breast cancer survivor, but twice a year,
at check up time it’s ferocious”
Lack of permanent citizenship
Frank believes we belittle the diversity of suffering by reducing it
to a unifying general view
Sufferers suspicious of this ‘medical reduction’
“When admitted to hospital or visiting a doctor, we stop being
people and start being patients. We relinquish our identity as people
who live in their hospitals”.
Reconstructive surgery to face – article doesn’t mention name
although pictures of patient shown
They need us but they don’t acknowledge that
In post modern times pressures on clinical practice, including cost
of physician’s time, greater use of technologies, mean less time for
patients to speak
People still need their specific professionals, but professions as a
group are regarded with increasing cynicism
Author sounds bitter and angry
One of our most difficult duties as human beings is to listen to the
voices of those who suffer
Ill voices are easy to ignore because they are often faltering in tone
and mixed in message
These voices bespeak conditions of embodiment that most of us
would rather forget as it reveals our own vulnerability
REVIEW
Tries to identify people with illness have stories that need to be
told, but that doctors do not hear or want to hear
Thick veil of sociological jargon and excess literacy that makes this
difficult to read but easy to publish
Professional in sociology venturing into medicine/illness trying to
quantify/qualitative analysis of sickness
Tries to take back perceived ownership of the illness experience
from professionals
Tries to express medicine posing it’s own language on people, but
then imposes own sociological language
Condescending/confrontational, but maybe not everyone else has
such a benevolent approach
Maybe seeing the patient’s perspective doesn’t come easy to all
doctors
Maybe he’s just a wounded patient?
Later divulges his diagnosis of testicular cancer successfully treated
Different slant from this viewpoint
But does this give him the right to take ownership of advocacy?
Author seems to have had turbulent contact with medical
professionals – sounds bitter sometimes considering limited
resources/time to treat the many at the expense of treatment to
individuals
Ideal is to have unlimited time and resources to give individual
patients maximally optimised care.
Not always possible
My thesis is that different bodies have “elective affinities” to
different illness narratives
Theories don’t stand up next to real stories
Very occasionally Frank includes illness stories
Desire
Pt dying of leukaemia “maybe at sixty it’s a good time to bow out”
Lacking desire
Why buy shoes? Why have dental work done?
Diagnostic shock…….to living with cancer
Taking up tap dancing lessons as something he always wanted to
do, but also to keep falling out of love with yourself as illness
attempts to diminish or disfigure you
It is not dying we fear, but the diminished self
Trying to demonstrate a principle called the ‘disciplined body’
Pt with breast cancer “relief ” finally being punished and paying
price for being bad mother
Feels she deserves this
Self pride
Returns to work soon after mastectomy
Recurrence undergoes chemotherapy
Makes informed decision to stop chemotherapy sooner than advised
Despite medical pressure, accepts advice and makes her own decision
She makes peace with her aging body
Far from interpreting as punishment sees her experience has made her
more of a person for having survived
Humbling passage about a person’s journey with cancer
And all these people in pain…all these people with aches and all these
people suffering. We walk in different dimensions. We have access to
different experiences, different knowledges. And there are so many of us
too. We could help the normals and whitecoats both. We could help them
see that they’re wasting the precious moments of their lives. Sick people
know what health is. They know it by it’s very loss….
Live as if it really mattered, don’t waste precious moments
None of the theories are evidence based
Author’s perogative?
Who is intended audience? Other sociologists? Not patients not
doctors
Would I recommend this book?