Image for Feeling Dis-ease in Modern History

Feeling Dis-ease in Modern History : Experiencing Medicine and Illness

Part of the History of Emotions series
See all formats and editions

This book explores experiences of illness, broadly construed.

It encompasses the emotional and sensory disruptions that attend disease, injury, mental illness or trauma, and gives an account of how medical practitioners, experts, lay authorities and the public have felt about such disruptions. Considering all sides of the medical encounter and highlighting the intersection of intellectual history and medical knowledge, of institutional atmospheres, built environments and technological practicalities, and of emotional and sensory experience, Feeling Dis-ease in Modern History presents a wide-ranging affective account of feeling well and of feeling ill.

Especially occupied with the ways in which dynamics of power and authority have either validated or discounted dis-eased feelings, the book’s contributors probe at the intersectional politics of medical expertise and patient experience to better understand situated expressions of illness, their reception, and their social, cultural and moral valuation.

Drawing on methodologies from the histories of emotions, senses, science and the medical humanities, this book gives an account of the complexity of undergoing illness: of feeling dis-ease.

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
£26.09 Save 10.00%
RRP £28.99
Product Details
Bloomsbury Academic
1350228400 / 9781350228405
Paperback / softback
610.19
28/12/2023
United Kingdom
English
296 pages : illustrations (black and white)
24 cm