L'autore:
One of New York magazine's Top Doctors, David Biro teaches at SUNY Downstate and practices in Brooklyn with his father.
Dalla quarta di copertina:
“David Biro makes effective use of his ability to write as a physician, as a literary scholar, and as someone who has faced a life-threatening illness. The Language of Pain breaks new ground both as a study of metaphor and as a demonstration of the clinical relevance of literary texts. Clinicians who treat pain, people struggling to express their own pain, and scholars of literature and medicine will find much to appreciate in this book.”—Arthur W. Frank, author of The Wounded Storyteller and The Renewal of Generosity
“Biro’s meditation on pain beautifully distills metaphors of experience from literature, medicine, and real life. The author reveals how patients, struggling against isolation, reach out with words to touch their pain, and, in the process, touch others. Human connections transform pain for this doctor (and patient), who builds a welcoming bridge between clinical medicine and the humanities. Bravo!”—Arthur Kleinman, author of The Illness Narratives
“The book highlights the need to understand how we communicate our pain to one another—especially in people suffering excruciating pain and unable to communicate their suffering to their doctors. The consequences can be disastrous.”—Ronald Melzack, author of The Challenge of Pain
“A literate and deeply felt work of medical philosophy that ponders the subtle mystery of how words give meaning to—and even relief from—corporeal and psychic anguish.”—Andrew Solomon, author of The Noonday Demon and winner of the National Book Award|“David Biro makes effective use of his ability to write as a physician, as a literary scholar, and as someone who has faced a life-threatening illness. The Language of Pain breaks new ground both as a study of metaphor and as a demonstration of the clinical relevance of literary texts. Clinicians who treat pain, people struggling to express their own pain, and scholars of literature and medicine will find much to appreciate in this book.”—Arthur W. Frank, author of The Wounded Storyteller and The Renewal of Generosity“Biro’s meditation on pain beautifully distills metaphors of experience from literature, medicine, and real life. The author reveals how patients, struggling against isolation, reach out with words to touch their pain, and, in the process, touch others. Human connections transform pain for this doctor (and patient), who builds a welcoming bridge between clinical medicine and the humanities. Bravo!”—Arthur Kleinman, author of The Illness Narratives“The book highlights the need to understand how we communicate our pain to one another—especially in people suffering excruciating pain and unable to communicate their suffering to their doctors. The consequences can be disastrous.”—Ronald Melzack, author of The Challenge of Pain“A literate and deeply felt work of medical philosophy that ponders the subtle mystery of how words give meaning to—and even relief from—corporeal and psychic anguish.”—Andrew Solomon, author of The Noonday Demon and winner of the National Book Award
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