A happy doctor's escape from narrative: reflection in Saturday

Medical Humanities
Catherine Belling

Abstract

The humanities have, in their application to medicine, become almost synonymous with narrative. When medical education turned to 'reflection' as a means to nurture coherent and ethical professional identity, interventions tended to take narrative as their primary form. Even while promoting 'mindfulness' as complete engagement in the present moment, proponents of reflection sometimes subsume reflection under the category 'narrative'. The author offers a reading of Ian McEwan's novel Saturday, the account of the thoughts of a London surgeon over the course of one day, attending to the novel's reflective and lyrical as well as its narrative passages, in order to suggest that, rather than grouping the various forms that constitute 'literature' into a single instrumental method for producing more professional and ethical doctors, it might be valuable to attend to the various modes that constitute literary discourse, of which narrative is only one.

Citations

Dec 28, 2019·The Journal of Medical Humanities·Stella Bolaki
Dec 10, 2016·The Journal of Medicine and Philosophy·Kathy Behrendt
Nov 27, 2014·Academic Medicine : Journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges·Arno K Kumagai, Thirusha Naidu
Sep 5, 2020·Wiener klinische Wochenschrift·Wolfgang Schütz

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