I took John Berger’s book A Fortunate Man: the story of a country doctor to read over the New Year holiday. Berger’s account of a General Practitioner working in the Forest of Dean in the 1960s, illustrated with Jean Mohr’s photographs, was first published in 1967 and reissued by Canongate in 2015. The extended essay opens with vignettes of patients attended by an old-fashioned community physician in a rural area: a woodman trapped under a felled tree; a young woman’s asthma brought on by the stress of a failed affair; the hopeless grief of a widowed farmer; and the severe piles of a man who has long lived as a woman
This is one of those books that draws the reader in from the beginning, starting with the unusual ti...
Damon Galgut’s The Good Doctor (2003) deals with the present moment in which South Africans wonder h...
Claire Louise Caudill is one of those rare people who have become legends in their own time. She del...
I took John Berger’s book A Fortunate Man: the story of a country doctor to read over the New Year h...
Adopting a public history approach, this community exhibition, screenings, talks, and participative ...
50 years ago, the visionary writer John Berger and Swiss photographer Jean Mohr published A Fortunat...
This is a book about an endangered, soon to be extinct species: the country doctor who was also a ne...
This article rereads Emile Zola's Le Docteur Pascal (1893) from a critical Medical Humanities perspe...
Anyone who still views American pioneer life through a rainbow haze of romance would do well to read...
The enduring image of general practice during the “classic” NHS, from its creation in 1948 until its...
Over the past thirty years, rural health care in the United States has changed dramatically. The ste...
To mark its 50th anniversary, Michael Pinchbeck was commissioned by New Perspectives to write and de...
As a young man, the author believed in the value of changing his occupation, or at least his post, a...
Dr. Mausdeth was a good doctor. Everybody in Partridge knows that he was a good doctor. Why, he brou...
Based on a Dissertation read before the Royal Medical Society on Friday, 21st October 1960Picture, i...
This is one of those books that draws the reader in from the beginning, starting with the unusual ti...
Damon Galgut’s The Good Doctor (2003) deals with the present moment in which South Africans wonder h...
Claire Louise Caudill is one of those rare people who have become legends in their own time. She del...
I took John Berger’s book A Fortunate Man: the story of a country doctor to read over the New Year h...
Adopting a public history approach, this community exhibition, screenings, talks, and participative ...
50 years ago, the visionary writer John Berger and Swiss photographer Jean Mohr published A Fortunat...
This is a book about an endangered, soon to be extinct species: the country doctor who was also a ne...
This article rereads Emile Zola's Le Docteur Pascal (1893) from a critical Medical Humanities perspe...
Anyone who still views American pioneer life through a rainbow haze of romance would do well to read...
The enduring image of general practice during the “classic” NHS, from its creation in 1948 until its...
Over the past thirty years, rural health care in the United States has changed dramatically. The ste...
To mark its 50th anniversary, Michael Pinchbeck was commissioned by New Perspectives to write and de...
As a young man, the author believed in the value of changing his occupation, or at least his post, a...
Dr. Mausdeth was a good doctor. Everybody in Partridge knows that he was a good doctor. Why, he brou...
Based on a Dissertation read before the Royal Medical Society on Friday, 21st October 1960Picture, i...
This is one of those books that draws the reader in from the beginning, starting with the unusual ti...
Damon Galgut’s The Good Doctor (2003) deals with the present moment in which South Africans wonder h...
Claire Louise Caudill is one of those rare people who have become legends in their own time. She del...