Second Hand Book Reviews

Written by Sydney Smith
Published March 20, 2004
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Which brings me to the other book review of interest in JAMA, Reel Psychiatry: Movie Portrayals of Psychiatric Conditions, a psychiatric textbook which uses cinematic examples as case histories. (And which Psychscape has already noted, along with a comprehensive bibliography of movies and mental illness.) Using fiction to illustrate psychopathology has a long tradition in medical education. I remember one of my professors in medical school showing film clips of his favorite personality disorders - Elizabeth Taylor in Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (borderline), Lee Remick in Days of Wine and Roses (dependent), and, of course, The Three Faces of Eve, the most famous of all dissociatives.

And finally, this week's New England Journal of Medicine has a review of a book that uses fiction to teach medical history, the historical novel The Speckled Monster: A Historical Tale of Battling Smallpox:

Numerous historians have written about this momentous revolution in medical practice. Inoculation laid the groundwork for vaccination, immunology, and medical statistics. Carrell's book, The Speckled Monster, adds a new twist to the topic; it is a fictional account based on extensive historical research (the subtitle of the book is "a historical tale"). Her narrative begins slowly but quickly picks up the pace as it interweaves events on both sides of the Atlantic and suggests their mutual influence. It is unapologetically heroic: Lady Mary and Boylston triumphed despite the substantial odds and obstacles against them. Lady Mary took on the formidable London medical establishment, whereas Boylston contended with providential clerics and foreign-trained physicians (particularly the cantankerous Scot, William Douglass). Both were threatened with mob violence. In sweeping and dramatic strokes, Carrell paints the ostracism Boylston endured as he made his rounds through colonial Boston; in England, Lady Mary suffered public criticism for daring to put her children deliberately in harm's way.

Sounds like an eighteenth-century version of Quincy, M.E..

ADDED BONUS: Quincy vs Columbo Superstar Monkey Duel Game

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Second Hand Book Reviews
Published: March 20, 2004
Type:
Section: Books
Filed Under: Books: Health, Books: History, Books: Nonfiction, Books: Original Fiction, Books: Science
Writer: Sydney Smith
Sydney Smith's BC Writer page
Sydney Smith's personal site
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