The Healing Arts An Oxford Illustrated Anthology.
NT$
1105
From Library Journal
"There is a case for saying that health care itself is an art with a scientific basis" says editor Downie (moral philosophy, Univ. of Glasgow) in the preface to this anthology, which brings together literary selections that connect healthcare and the arts. In making his choices, Downie provides literary styles from different historical periods and has tried to make these selections self-contained. Such an undertaking is a Sisyphean editorial task certain to affront its readership for either its inclusions or its omissions. In the case of a healing arts anthology, the intended readership itself is problematical, for it includes everyone from patients to doctors, subjects from birth to death, and authors from the Bible to the present day in attempting a "whole person understanding which some critics find missing in medical education and medical practice." This miscellany is a source for those without fuller resources and may serve as an index to richer collections.
James Swanton, Albert Einstein Coll. of Medicine, New York
Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc.
This anthology is intended to expose doctors, nurses, and others who care for patients to prose and poetry that will enlarge their awareness and deepen their understanding of the complex healing process. It suits the purpose. Editor Downie's choices range over many centuries and lands, examining, or neatly touching, various stages of individual human life and major life events, various p