In this Issue
- Volume 10, 1991
- Issue
- Tenth Anniversary Retrospective
Founded in 1982, Literature and Medicine is a peer-reviewed journal publishing scholarship that explores representational and cultural practices concerning health care and the body. Areas of interest include disease, illness, health, and disability; violence, trauma, and power relations; and the cultures of biomedical science and technology and of the clinic, as these are represented and interpreted in verbal, visual, and material texts. Literature and Medicine features one thematic and one general issue each year. Past theme issues have explored identity and difference; contagion and infection; cancer pathography; the representations of genomics; and the narration of pain.
Literature and Medicine is co-sponsored by the Department of Medical Education, College of Medicine at the University of Illinois at Chicago.
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Johns Hopkins University Pressviewing issue
Volume 10, 1991Table of Contents
Responses
Volume 1 — Toward a New Discipline
Volume 2 — Images of Healers
Volume 3 — The Physician as Writer
Volume 4 — Psychiatry and Literature
Volume 5 — Use and Abuse of Literary Concepts in Medicine
Volume 6 — General Issue
Volume 7 — Literature and Bioethics
Volume 8 — The Cultures of Medicine
Volume 9 — Fictive Ills: Literary Perspectives on Wounds and Diseases
Volume 10 — Tenth Anniversary Retrospective
Book Reviews
Contributors
- Contributors
- pp. 182-184
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/lm.2011.0192
Index
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Copyright
Copyright © 1991 The Johns Hopkins University Press.