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What Her Body Thought
Susan Griffin
其他書名
A Journey Into the Shadows
出版
Harper Collins
, 2011-06-28
主題
Social Science / Disease & Health Issues
Biography & Autobiography / Personal Memoirs
Health & Fitness / Diseases & Conditions / Chronic Fatigue Syndrome
History / Social History
ISBN
0062094343
9780062094346
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=ZCL1ajXuRFcC&hl=&source=gbs_api
EBook
SAMPLE
註釋
“[A] challenging and provocative chronicle of an illness . . . an extraordinary number of ideas from, birth to earth, are plowed and seeded.” —
Kirkus Reviews
In this boldly intimate and intelligent blend of personal memoir, social history, and cultural criticism, Pulitzer Prize-nominated author Susan Griffin profoundly illuminates our understanding of illness. She explores its physical, emotional, spiritual, and social aspects, revealing how it magnifies our yearning for connection and reconciliation.
Griffin begins with a gripping account of her own harrowing experiences with Chronic Fatigue and Immune Dysfunction Syndrome (CFIDS), a potentially life-threatening illness that has been misconstrued and marginalized through the label “psychosomatic.” Faced with terrifying bouts of fatigue, pain, and diminished thinking, the shame of illness, and the difficulty of being told you are “not really ill,” she was driven to understand how early childhood loss made her susceptible to disease. Alongside her own story, Griffin weaves in her fascinating interpretation of the story of Marie du Plessis, popularized as the fictional Camille, an eighteenth-century courtesan whose young life was taken by tuberculosis.
Griffin insists that we must tell our stories to maintain our own integrity and authority, so that the sources of suffering become visible and validated. She writes passionately of a society where we are all cared for through “the rootedness of our connections. How the wound of being allowed to suffer points to a need to meet at the deepest level, to make an exchange at the nadir of life and death, the giving and taking which will weave a more spacious fabric of existence, communitas, community.” Her views of the larger problems of illness and society are deeply illuminating.