The Doctor-Patient Relationship and the Nineteenth-Century French Novel analyses the representation of the doctor-patient relationship in the nineteenth-century French novel, notably in the words of Balzac, Sand, Stendhal, and Zola. It argues that the doctor-patient relationship is represented in these novels as a site of interpersonal negotiation wherein the meaning of medical authority, embodied experience, and the spectre of illness and pain are mediated and reimagined. This book highlights how the doctor-patient relationship is often idealized by the novel, wherein the doctor is characterised as a both dedicated to his patients and local community, as well as being a God-like master of life, death, and medical knowledge. The volume suggests that the doctor-patient encounter is often depicted as a separate, although inherently related, concept that undermines this idealisation of medical relationships. The doctor-patient encounter thereby questions the hegemonic power of medical practitioners over their patients by pointing towards how novels depict patients as resisting and even manipulating their doctors. The book identifies and explores other important themes within the doctor-patient relationship such as the medical gaze (regard médical), power relationships, and the use of embodied metaphor. In particular, the book highlights how the doctor-patient relationship is often a confrontation between scientific knowledge and the experience of gender and disability. The book's conceptual framework is derived from the critical medical humanities, and the volume revitalises and reframes the doctor-patient relationship by considering the intrinsic slippage between idealised relationships and critical encounters. The book uses close readings of its corpus to understand how medical practice is debated and undermined concurrently with its idealisation. It places literary works within a new historical context by reading across novels within their medical and scientific context, and situates them for the first time in the intellectual context of the critical medical humanities. The book points forward to how nineteenth-century French novels can reform how the critical medical humanities views the medical relationship, and the potential impact on real-world patients.
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This book studies a wide range of canonical authors from across the nineteenth century from the perspective of the medical humanities, focussing on the idealized doctor-patient relationship and the medical encounter.
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Acknowledgements Note on translations Introduction: Literary Medical Relationships and Encounters 1: Failed Ideals: The Country Doctor and his Patients from Balzac to Zola 2: Blood at the Bedside: Subverting the Medical Relationship in Stendhal 3: Medical Narratives and Diseased Bodies: Troubling Encounters in Sand and Balzac 4: Zola's Lourdes and the Mysteriousness of the Doctor-Patient Relationship Conclusion: Doctors and Patients: Into the Twenty-First Century Bibliography
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Sarah Jones completed her DPhil at the University of Oxford in 2019 and worked as a Departmental and College Lecturer in French where she specialized in teaching and research modern French literature. She is a Fellow of the Higher Education Academy and a Learning Designer at the University of Oxford.
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Re-reads nineteenth-century French novels alongside contemporary medical humanities research and historical medical texts neglected by the literary studies community Proposes a new critical reframing of the doctor-patient relationship Introduces new ways of understanding medicine, power, and vision from the perspective of literature
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780198893790
Publisert
2025-04-24
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press
Høyde
234 mm
Bredde
153 mm
Aldersnivå
UP, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
240

Forfatter

Biographical note

Sarah Jones completed her DPhil at the University of Oxford in 2019 and worked as a Departmental and College Lecturer in French where she specialized in teaching and research modern French literature. She is a Fellow of the Higher Education Academy and a Learning Designer at the University of Oxford.