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Literature in Collaboration: The Work of Literature in the Critical Medical Humanities

Woods, Angela; Rákóczi, James

Authors

James Rákóczi



Contributors

Anna M. Elsner
Editor

Monika Pietrzak-Franger
Editor

Abstract

What might the medical humanities be capable of doing?’ asked Viney, Callard, and Woods in their 2015 call for a critical medical humanities. This chapter endeavours to answer that question by investigating how ‘the literary’ is mobilized in health-focused projects whose commitment to interdisciplinary entanglement renders them exemplary of the field’s critical turn. We interviewed seven UK-based literary studies scholars about their work in two or more such projects in order to understand how ‘the literary’ (as discipline, approach, and praxis) features within project design and delivery, the roles taken up by the literary studies scholar, and the consequent effects on shared understandings about the functions of the literary text. One of the most striking findings of this exploratory study was the interviewees’ determination for the literary text to be considered in non-representational terms and concurrent commitment to championing novel articulations of the value and ‘use’ of literary endeavour.

Citation

Woods, A., & Rákóczi, J. (2024). Literature in Collaboration: The Work of Literature in the Critical Medical Humanities. In A. M. Elsner, & M. Pietrzak-Franger (Eds.), Literature and Medicine (357-374). Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009300070.025

Online Publication Date Jan 17, 2024
Publication Date Jan 18, 2024
Deposit Date Feb 28, 2024
Publicly Available Date Jul 18, 2024
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Pages 357-374
Book Title Literature and Medicine
Chapter Number 21
ISBN 9781009300063; 9781009300117
DOI https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009300070.025
Public URL https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/2289215