Embodied Storytellers: Disability Studies and Medical Humanities

Hastings Center Report 45 (2):11-15 (2015)
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Abstract

Rereading a canonic book in medical humanities can generate an immediate sense of how much has changed in the larger conversations still circulating around the issues that book broached in significant ways. The appearance in 2013 of the second edition of Arthur Frank's The Wounded Storyteller, first published in 1995, prompted me to review what has happened in the field of body studies in the intervening decades. Some developments point to the continuing importance of Frank's book, and others raise productive questions about its limitations.

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