Acknowledgements |
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xi | |
Foreword |
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xiii | |
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Introduction "Thinking Otherwise" with Homer |
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1 | (14) |
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How we got into this epic mess |
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Where does medical education fit in? |
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Using Homer in new ways to refresh medical education |
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15 | (12) |
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From two types of hero to the hero with a thousand faces |
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Emergence of the anti-hero |
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A new wave of heroes and heroines |
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Chapter Two Heroes (Are Yesterday's Men) |
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27 | (21) |
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Heroes satisfy a need in those who are not heroes |
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The heroic tradition celebrates masculinity |
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Heroes must embrace mortality |
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Heroes have a stand-in, or ritual substitute |
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Heroes have a cult after death |
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Heroes are flawed psychologically and morally |
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Heroes are charismatic as well as skilled |
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The behaviour of heroes is excessive |
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Today's heroes are not as good as yesterday's men |
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Homeric heroes are generally of two types: force or craft |
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Chapter Three Putting it Bluntly |
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48 | (15) |
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Can "thinking otherwise" with Homer really help doctors to improve communication? |
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Embassy scenarios in the clinic and on the ward |
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Chapter Four Lost in Translation |
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63 | (20) |
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Issues of translation in healthcare contexts |
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Faithfulness to the original |
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83 | (21) |
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Medical history as oral tradition |
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The medical history and genre |
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The aesthetic worth of the case presentation |
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The effect of oral traditions |
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Telling the same story to different audiences |
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104 | (18) |
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Communication: skill or style for life? |
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Communication, virtue, virtuosity |
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Conclusions: empathy ancient and modern |
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122 | (13) |
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The lyrical body in Homer |
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Finding a place for the lyrical |
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135 | (20) |
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Written in collaboration with Dr David Levine |
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Alternatives to medicine as war |
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The return of the repressed |
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155 | (22) |
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Written in collaboration with Jacob King, Elin Barham and Kirsten Leslie |
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Medicine and error: from individuals to systems |
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Doctors too are wounded by their errors |
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Chapter Ten Whistleblowing |
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177 | (16) |
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Written from an original idea by, and in collaboration with, Victoria Rodulson |
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Dilemmas of "speaking out" |
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Whistleblowing and virtue ethics |
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Whistleblowing in the flesh |
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Speaking out against social injustice |
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Anonymity or open confrontation? |
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193 | (18) |
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Ritual humiliation in medicine |
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"Honour-shame" and "Guilt" cultures |
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Conclusions and solutions |
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Chapter Twelve Bone Tired |
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211 | (13) |
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Bone tired and ready for sleep |
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Durational misperformance |
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Embracing Hypnos through a new medicine |
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Chapter Thirteen Resilience |
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224 | (21) |
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Medicine's "Achilles' Heel" |
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"Thinking otherwise" about resilience and grit through Homer |
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Bouncing up, not bouncing back |
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245 | (22) |
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Bibliography |
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267 | (33) |
Index |
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300 | |