Journal ArticleThis is an accepted manuscript of an article published as Sarah Goldingay (2012) Contra mortem, petimus scientiam: Pain, tragedy,death and medicine in BLOK/EKO, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 32:3, 347-358. Published online by Taylor and Francis on 3rd January 2014, available online via: http://wwww.tandfonline.com/10.1386/stap.32.3.347_1This article uses Howard Barker's play BLOK/EKO as a poetic lens through which to explore questions of pain in the twenty-first century. Like the play, it asks could poetry replace medicine? To do this it interrogates one of the text's primary themes, the annihilation of the medical profession so that the status of poetry can be enhanced. By killing all doctors, Barker offers the opport...
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Late medieval culture tends to value pain highly and positively. Accordingly, much medievalist schol...
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INTRODUCTION The topic of pain offers a treasure trove of anthropological research projects that po...
Throughout much of clinical history, those working within the arena of pain medicine have conceptual...
This article critically analyses the dynamic levels at which metaphor, as the preferred trope throug...
Late medieval culture tends to value pain highly and positively. Accordingly, much medievalist schol...
This paper centres on the art projects May and the potentiality of pain (2014-15), and It´s always ...
Book synopsis: Beyond the Rhetoric of Pain presents a fresh, interdisciplinary approach to the curre...
This article looks at the Civil War writing of Silas Weir Mitchell, and considers his attitudes towa...
This issue of 19 has been guest edited by Louise Hide, Joanna Bourke, and Carmen Mangion. Collective...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis Group in Research in Dram...
While philosophical hermeneutics has often been criticized for not engaging issues concerning the bo...
Set in a sanatorium and narrated by patients suffering from tuberculosis, Camilo José Cela’s Pabelló...
This paper analyzes S. Weir Mitchell and his son John Kearsley Mitchell’s views on phantom limb pain...
To comprehend grief, we need knowledge about the range of diverse reactions incorporated within it. ...
This thesis investigates the competition between different material-semiotic translations of pain in...
This article analyzes the nonsense and violence embedded in the very “logicality” of language in End...
INTRODUCTION The topic of pain offers a treasure trove of anthropological research projects that po...
Throughout much of clinical history, those working within the arena of pain medicine have conceptual...
This article critically analyses the dynamic levels at which metaphor, as the preferred trope throug...
Late medieval culture tends to value pain highly and positively. Accordingly, much medievalist schol...
This paper centres on the art projects May and the potentiality of pain (2014-15), and It´s always ...