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Using Literature to Teach Social Justice and Activism. Martin Donohoe. William Butler Yeats. “Education is not filling a bucket, but lighting a fire”. Stories. Perspectives. Tumbling in the Hay Oliver St John Gogarty An Old Horse William J Kornrich. Background/Rationale.
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Using Literature to Teach Social Justice and Activism Martin Donohoe
William Butler Yeats “Education is not filling a bucket, but lighting a fire”
Perspectives Tumbling in the Hay Oliver St John Gogarty An Old Horse William J Kornrich
Background/Rationale • Social, economic and cultural contributors to health of individuals and populations under-emphasized in health professions curricula • Schism between medicine and public health • Students idealistic/motivated, but grow increasingly cynical and develop negative/defeatist attitudes as training progresses
Harvey Cushing “A physician is obligated to consider more than a diseased organ, more even than the whole man. He must view the man in his world.”
The Role of Literature • Vicarious experience • Explore diverse philosophies • Promotes empathy, critical thinking, flexibility, non-dogmatism, self-knowledge • Encourages creative thinking • Allows for group discussion/debate
Why Use Literature • Encourage appreciation of non-medical literature • Develop reading, analytical, speaking and writing skills • Promote ethical thinking (narrative ethics) • Identification with doctor authors (e.g., Keats, Chekhov, Maugham, Williams) • Enjoyable
Margaret Sanger Books have been to me what gold is to the miser, what new fields are to the explorer.
Rudolph Virchow “You can soon become so engrossed in study, then professional cares, in getting and spending…that you find too late with hearts given away that there is no place in your habit-stricken souls for those gentler influences that make life worth living”
Uses of Literature • Pedagogy • Therapy • Psychoanalysis • Promote communication
Goals • Educate students and practitioners about social justice issues • Highly motivated • Counter negative attitudinal changes and cynicism of trainees • Provoke thoughtful discussion about ethical and policy issues related to social justice
Goals • Promote activist-oriented research and writing • Translate knowledge into practice through volunteerism and service • Encourage lifelong, interdisciplinary learning and collegial practice
Issues • Access to care • Racial, sexual and SES discrepancies in outcomes • The effects of poverty on health
Issues • Violence against women • Human subject experimentation • Environmental degradation • War, peace and human rights
Issues • Homelessness • Substance abuse • Tobacco industry • Privacy: • Genetic testing • Drug testing
Issues • Corporatization of academic and clinical medicine • The pharmaceutical and tobacco industries • Conflicts of interest / Role responsibilities
Where and When to Teach • Elective courses • Incorporation into existing curricula • Service learning; community-based teaching • Ethics and Humanities Grand Rounds • Interdisciplinary seminars
Where and When to Teach • Clinical teaching rounds • Including at the bedside • Reading groups • Summer research/service stipends • Faculty development
Stigmatization John Updike “From the Journal of a Leper.” Am J Dermatopathol 1982;4(2):137-42
Homelessness Doris Lessing “An Old Woman and Her Cat” From the Doris Lessing Reader (New York: Knopf, 1988)
Human Subject Experimentation / Human Rights Abuses Shusaku Endo The Sea and Poison (New York: Taplinger Publishing Co., 1972)
Poverty • Orwell, George. How the Poor Die. In Sonia Orwell and Ian Angus, eds. The Collected Essays, Journalism and Letter of George Orwell, IV; In Front of Your Nose, 1945-1950. New York: Harcourt, Brace and World, Inc: pp.223-233. • Checkhov, Anton. Letter to AF Koni, January 26, 1891, Letter to AS Survivor, March 9, 1890. In Norman Cousins, ed. The Physician in Literature Philadelphia: WB Saunders, 1982. • Eighner, Lars. Phlebitis: At the Public Hospital. In Travels with Lizbeth. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1993.
Chekhov on Sakhalin “Sakhalin is a place of unbearable sufferings…[W]e have let millions of people rot in prison, destroying them carelessly, thoughtlessly, barbarously”
Chekhov on Sakhalin “A woman on Sakhalin is not exactly a human being…and not exactly a creature even lower than a domestic animal, but somewhere between the two.” “[A]ll of us [are to blame]”
Fyodor Dostoevsky “A society should be judged not by how it treats its outstanding citizens but by how it treats its criminals”
Race and Access to Care Ernest J Gaines “The Sky is Gray” in Gray, Marion Secundy, ed. Trials,Tribulations, and Celebrations: African American Perspectives on Health, Illness, Aging and Loss. Yarmouth, Maine: Intercultural Press, 1992
Mental Illness Anton Chekhov Ward Number Six in Chekhov A. Seven short novels (New York: Bantam, 1976)
Conflicting Responsibilities of Physicians Pearl S. Buck “The Enemy” In Far and Near: Stories of Japan, China, and America (New York: The John Day Company, 1934)
Domestic Violence Michael LaCombe “Playing God” In LaCombe M, ed. On Being a Doctor. Philadelphia: American College of Physicians, 1994
Single Motherhood / The Welfare System Grace Paley “An Interest in Life” In We are the Stories We Tell: The Best Short Stories by North American Women since 1945, Wendy Martin, ed. (New York: Pantheon Books, 1990)
The Humanities and Social Sciences • Literature • Art • History • Law • Philosophy • Photography • e.g., Margaret Sanger, W Eugene Smith • Others
“Activist” Journals • American Journal of Public Health • Public Citizen’s Health Letter • PNHP Newsletter • Mother Jones • Harpers • Z Magazine, The Progressive, In These Times • Dollars and Sense
“Activist” Journals • Rachel’s Environmental Weekly • Bulletin of Atomic Scientists • Multinational Monitor • Hightower Lowdown • Some articles in NEJM, JAMA, JGIM, SSM, Policy, Politics, and Nurs Prac, others
Additional Resources • NYU Literature and Medicine On-line Database http://endeavor.med.nyu.edu/lit-med/lit-med-db/topview.html • Public Citizen’s Health Research Group – Activist-oriented courses http://www.citizen.org/hrg/activistcour/index.cfm • On-line syllabus exchange projects – e.g., ASBH • Syllabi, reading lists available from MD
Rudolph Virchow • Father of pathology • Established cell doctrine, elucidated pathology of thrombosis, PE, leukocytosis, and leukemia • Member of Prussian state and local government for over 30 years • Founded Journal “Medical Reform”
Rudolph Virchow • Advocated • Public provision of medical care for indigent • Prohibition of child labor • Universal education • Free and unlimited democracy
Rudolph Virchow • Instituted programs for • Improved sanitation • Stricter food inspection • Revamping ineffective hospital policies • Enhanced nursing education
Rudolph Virchow “Typhus, cholera, tuberculosis, scurvy, some mental diseases, and cretinism [are among] those maladies that result from the unequal distribution of civilization’s advantages”
Rudolph Virchow “Doctors are natural attorneys for the poor … If medicine is to really accomplish its great task, it must intervene in political and social life…”
Günter Grass “The first job of a citizen is to keep your mouth open.”
First They Came for the Jews Pastor Niemoller
Contact Information Public Health and Social Justice Website http://www.phsj.org martindonohoe@phsj.org