Artículos de revistas
The disease-subject as a subject of literature
Fecha
2007Registro en:
Philosophy, Ethics, and Humanities in Medicine, Volumen 2, Issue 1, 2018,
17475341
10.1186/1747-5341-2-10
Autor
Kottow, Andrea R.
Kottow, Michael H.
Institución
Resumen
Based on the distinction between living body and lived body, we describe the disease-subject as representing the impact of disease on the existential life-project of the subject. Traditionally, an individual's subjectivity experiences disorders of the body and describes ensuing pain, discomfort and unpleasantness. The idea of a disease-subject goes further, representing the lived body suffering existential disruption and the possible limitations that disease most probably will impose. In this limit situation, the disease-subject will have to elaborate a new life-story, a new character or way-of-being-in-the-world, it will become a different subject. Health care professionals need to realize that patients are not mere observers of their body, for they are immersed in a reassesment of values, relationships, priorities, perhaps even life-plans. Becoming acquainted with literature's capacity to create characters, modify narratives and depict life-stories in crisis, might sharpen physicians