This is a book about the meanings we make out of pain. The greatest surprise I encountered in discussing this topic over the past ten years was the consistency with which I was asked a single unvarying question: Are you writing about physical pain or mental pain? The overwhelming consistency of this response convinces me that modern culture rests upon and underlying belief so strong that it grips us with the force of a founding myth. Call it the Myth of Two Pains. We live in an era when many people believe--as a basic, unexamined foundation of thought--that pain comes divided into separate types: physical and mental. These two types of pain, so the myth goes, are as different as land and sea. You feel physical pain if your arm breaks, and you feel mental pain if your heart breaks. Between these two different events we seem to imagine a gulf so wide and deep that it might as well be filled by a sea that is impossible to navigate.
Ultimately, the book investigates America's love-hate relationship with black bodies in pain.
"This illuminating work boldly ranges beyond conventional boundaries to provide a deeper understanding of our common afflictions, our humanity, and our ennobling struggle for transcendence."--1992 PEN/Spielvogel-Diamonstein Award, Judges ...
In this state-of-theart volume, culture is placed in the forefront of studying pain in an integrative manner.
And Leigh Cowart would know: they are not just a researcher and science writer—they’re an inveterate, high-sensation seeking masochist. And they have a few questions: Why do people engage in masochism?
Many individuals and cultures find meaning, particularly religious meaning, even in chronic and inexplicable pain. This interdisciplinary book includes not only essays but also discussions among a wide range of specialists.
Bartholomew, Saint, 29 Bartra, Roger, 37, 38, 43 Barville, Mister (from Fanny Hill), 155–6 Bayanzi,peopleofthe Congo ... 69,72, 77 Beckford,William, 57 Beecher, Henry Knowles, 109 Bell, Benjamin, 117 Bell, sirCharles, 125,209 Benito, ...
This book examines the experience of pain in ways that could significantly improve how patients and practitioners deal with pain.
Judith Herman discussed the text as a paradigmatic tale of recovered memory and Multiple Personality Disorder, that is, she took it as established that the abuse had indeed occurred, despite Fraser's total amnesia.26 However, ...
Translating Pain fills this gap by examining literature from Muslim North Africa, the Caribbean, and Eastern Europe to reveal the representation of immigrant suffering in fiction.
A compulsively readable explorer’s journal of the hidden territory of pain, as profound and insightful as the work of Oliver Sacks and Sherwin Nuland.