Book Review: Mitigating Healthcare Burnout through Self-Reflection

For only a moment I was concerned that Carolyn Roy-Bornstein’s new book, A Prescription for Burnout: Restorative Writing for Healthcare Professionals, was going to ask too much of me and my colleagues. A retired pediatrician and writer-in-residence for a family medicine residency program, Roy-Bornstein has created a reflective writing workbook built around the definition of…

A Shelter in the Sea

I have been finding comfort in the oceans recently. A livestream of a reef in Honduras plays constantly on my computer, even when lost in a sea of open tabs. I’ve picked up Herman Melville’s Moby-Dick, Lulu Miller’s Why Fish Don’t Exist, and Jules Verne’s Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea, and am enjoying their…

Between Work and Tear

Between Work and Tear: Cultures of “Kinetic” Work “When workers fell, severing limbs, the pain was acute, but borne. Yet what truly stung was the loneliness and anxiety of falling that weighed on their minds.” – Temporary People [Unnikrishnan 2017] “In the human body, as with capital, the different elements are not exchanged at the…

Therapy or Enhancement? Bioethics in Transhumanist Science Fictional Interpretations of the Body

Image Credit: Sanderson, Bill. “The gyri of the thinker’s brain as a maze of choices in biomedical ethics.” Scraperboard drawing, 1997. Wellcome Collection. [Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)] Therapy or Enhancement? Bioethics in Transhumanist Science Fictional Interpretations of the Body Since the Enlightenment, the idea of perpetual progress and the hegemony of rationality have…

Book Review: Liminal Spaces and the Moral Imagination in “Our Long Marvelous Dying” by Anna DeForest

Anna DeForest’s first novel, A History of Present Illness (2022), follows an unnamed medical student through tension-filled classroom and clinical years among more privileged classmates in New York City. DeForest’s follow-up novel seems a segue from the first. Our Long Marvelous Dying (2024) also features an unnamed narrator–one further along in their medical career– seeking…

“She was evidently insane”: Gender and Madness in Victorian Britain

How did Victorians understand and diagnose mental illness? If a person on trial in a nineteenth-century British courtroom was thought to be suffering from “madness,” the court did not necessarily ask a physician to provide an expert opinion or to diagnose the individual. As Joel Peter Eigen explains, doctors were not respected as expert witnesses…

When Medicine Met Diplomacy (Part II)

How did American medical professionals design and learn from the 1923 Japanese Medical Commission to the United States for the promotion of “American medicine”?