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The old physiology in English literature .Robin, Percy Ansell. January 1911 (has links)
Thesis (D. Lit.)--University of London. / Includes bibliographical references.
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La médecine, le malade et le médecin dans l'œuvre de ZolaDelamotte, Isabelle. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Doctoral)--Universite de la Sorbonne nouvelle, Paris III, 1992.
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La médecine, le malade et le médecin dans l'œuvre de ZolaDelamotte, Isabelle. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Doctoral)--Universite de la Sorbonne nouvelle, Paris III, 1992.
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"Ueber erwähnung und schilderung von köperlichen krankheiten und körpergebrechen in altfranzösischen dichtungen." Inaugural-dissertation,Kühn, Oscar, January 1902 (has links)
Inaug.-diss.--Breslau. / Lebenslauf. "Nur ein teil der untersuchungen des verfassers ... deren veröffentlichung für eine spätere zeit vorbehalten wird": p. [2]. This larger work promised, appeared in 1904 as "Abhandlungen zur geschichte der medicin" hft VIII, under title: Medicinisches aus der altfranzösischen dichtung. "Thesen": 1 leaf at end.
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"Ueber erwähnung und schilderung von köperlichen krankheiten und körpergebrechen in altfranzösischen dichtungen." Inaugural-dissertation,Kühn, Oscar, January 1902 (has links)
Inaug.-diss.--Breslau. / Lebenslauf. "Nur ein teil der untersuchungen des verfassers ... deren veröffentlichung für eine spätere zeit vorbehalten wird": p. [2]. This larger work promised, appeared in 1904 as "Abhandlungen zur geschichte der medicin" hft VIII, under title: Medicinisches aus der altfranzösischen dichtung. "Thesen": 1 leaf at end.
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Therapeutic Narrative Illness Writing and the Quest for HealingBrooks, Roslyn January 2004 (has links)
This thesis examines how narratives of illness become therapeutic narratives. The method is to engage closely with (mainly Australian) texts � literary accounts of illness � in order to identify key elements that effect a healing function (healing is distinguished from cure). Textual analysis is placed in the frame of medical information about the relevant conditions, and theoretical perspectives that provide a cultural and historical setting for illness writing. Bio-medical discourse foregrounds the clinical process of diagnosis, investigation and treatment and relegates the personal meanings of illness to secondary place. The thesis explores ways in which the patient�s account provides an alternative discourse that supplements � and at times challenges � the medical discourse. Illness foregrounds the body, and illness narratives confront the reality of embodied experience. Illness that is chronic or incurable, ageing, physical and mental decline, and the inescapable prospect of death confront the patient with the need to find meaning in experience. Narratives of illness may serve as ventilation, diversion or escape for the patient. They may provide practical help, information and consolation to family and carers, and others who suffer with the condition. These are valuable functions, but I argue that illness writing may embody more powerful therapeutic elements that transform and give meaning to the illness as part of the individual�s life story. Key therapeutic functions identified are perversity, empowerment and transformation. Healing can begin with the empowerment of telling one�s story. Illness stories may challenge the stigma and the subordination associated with disease. They can affirm a sense of belonging and community where illness intersects with other forms of marginalization. Powerful illness narratives are often characterised by perversity, overturning the assumptions of dominant cultural discourses � including those that place authority with the medical practitioner and demand acquiescence from the patient. The most powerful therapeutic narratives transform the story of illness into a new story.
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Family practices : medicine, gender, and literature in Victorian culture /Sparks, Tabitha. January 2001 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 2001. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 195-215).
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Therapeutic Narrative Illness Writing and the Quest for HealingBrooks, Roslyn January 2004 (has links)
This thesis examines how narratives of illness become therapeutic narratives. The method is to engage closely with (mainly Australian) texts � literary accounts of illness � in order to identify key elements that effect a healing function (healing is distinguished from cure). Textual analysis is placed in the frame of medical information about the relevant conditions, and theoretical perspectives that provide a cultural and historical setting for illness writing. Bio-medical discourse foregrounds the clinical process of diagnosis, investigation and treatment and relegates the personal meanings of illness to secondary place. The thesis explores ways in which the patient�s account provides an alternative discourse that supplements � and at times challenges � the medical discourse. Illness foregrounds the body, and illness narratives confront the reality of embodied experience. Illness that is chronic or incurable, ageing, physical and mental decline, and the inescapable prospect of death confront the patient with the need to find meaning in experience. Narratives of illness may serve as ventilation, diversion or escape for the patient. They may provide practical help, information and consolation to family and carers, and others who suffer with the condition. These are valuable functions, but I argue that illness writing may embody more powerful therapeutic elements that transform and give meaning to the illness as part of the individual�s life story. Key therapeutic functions identified are perversity, empowerment and transformation. Healing can begin with the empowerment of telling one�s story. Illness stories may challenge the stigma and the subordination associated with disease. They can affirm a sense of belonging and community where illness intersects with other forms of marginalization. Powerful illness narratives are often characterised by perversity, overturning the assumptions of dominant cultural discourses � including those that place authority with the medical practitioner and demand acquiescence from the patient. The most powerful therapeutic narratives transform the story of illness into a new story.
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William Faulkner, his eye for archetypes, and America's divided legacy of medicineHarmon, Geraldine Mart. January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Georgia State University, 2008. / Title from file title page. Thomas L. McHaney, committee chair; Nancy Chase, Marti Singer, committee members. Electronic text (175 p.) : digital, PDF file. Description based on contents viewed November 6, 2008. Includes bibliographical references (p. 161-175).
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Aspectos médicos en la obra del maestro fray B. Jerónimo FeijóoTelenti, Amalio. January 1969 (has links)
Tesis--Salamanca. / Bibliography: p. [387].
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