Pain, dying, loss – bleak topics for most of us. And yet, with sharp and delicate attentiveness, Wood shows how we might adventure with ‘total pain’, as Cicely Saunders did, as a pathway back to our inescapable vulnerability and interdependence. The value of bearing witness to suffering, the extending of personhood beyond the individual, the recognition of pain in its many forms, outreach the deathbed. These are lessons that speak to the weight of genocidal and environmental catastrophes as much as to loving accompaniment as the most radical form of care.

- Yasmin Gunaratnam, King’s College London,

As end-of-life care attracts increasing scrutiny, this carefully researched monograph, incorporating innovative scholarship in the medical/health humanities, offers an extensive, engaging and necessary re-appraisal of the concept of ‘total pain’.

- Steven Wilson, Queen’s University Belfast,

Introduced in 1964, Cicely Saunders' term 'total pain' has come to epitomise the holistic ethos of hospice and palliative care. It communicates how a dying person's pain can be a whole overwhelming experience, not only physical but also psychological, social and spiritual. 'Total pain' clearly summarises Saunders' whole-person, multidisciplinary outlook but is it a phenomenon, an intervention framework, a care approach or something else? This book disregards the idea that Saunders' phrase has one coherent meaning and instead explores the multiple interpretations now current in contemporary professional discourse. Using close reading of Saunders' extensive publications, as well as archival evidence and Saunders' own personal library, it situates the current usage of 'total pain' in wider histories of clinical holism, questions its similarity to later ideas of narrative medicine, and explores how it might express the ambiguities of bearing witness to pain and vulnerability when someone is dying.
Les mer
Offers the first full-length study of Cicely Saunders' idea of ‘total pain’, providing a fresh perspective on the ambiguous place of narrative in healthcare
Acknowledgements Series Editor's Preface Introduction: Pinning Down the Intangible Part I. Holism 1. Saunders’ Use of ‘Total Pain’ 2. Uses and Definitions of ‘Total Pain’ After Saunders: Many Holisms 3. Criticising ‘Total Pain’: Definite Concept or Ambiguous Term? Part II. Narrative 4. ‘Total Pain’ and Narrative Medicine: A Sense of an Ending 5. Defending a Narrative ‘Total Pain’: Narrative vs. Narrating 6. Using Narratives to Express ‘Total Pain’ Part III. Fragments and Silence 7. Quotations and Fragments: The Limits of Narrative 8. Photographs: Looking for/at ‘Total Pain’ 9. No Words: Presence and ‘Total Pain’ Conclusion: ‘Total Pain’ Now Bibliography Index
Les mer
The first full-length study devoted to ‘total pain’ and its legacies in contemporary practice

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781399531061
Publisert
2024-11-30
Utgiver
Edinburgh University Press
Høyde
234 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
256

Forfatter

Biografisk notat

Joe Wood is currently an Affiliate Researcher at King’s College London. He has worked in the English department at King’s and as part of the Glasgow End of Life Studies Group at the University of Glasgow. His work on Cicely Saunders and narrative at the end of life has led to collaborative work with St Christopher’s Hospice and the Royal College of Nursing.