ORIGINAL ARTICLES
The limits of pity in Bartleby and Moby Dick
Correspondence to:
Assistant Professor L Rosenblatt, Harvard Medical School, Department of Psychosocial Oncology and Palliative Care, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, 2 St Paul St. #404, Brookline, MA 02446, USA; laurie_rosenblatt{at}dfci.harvard.edu
Failures in the emotional connection between doctors and their patients tend to be reported in terms of compassion fatigue, burn-out, secondary trauma and depression in overlapping and somewhat interchangeable ways. In Moby Dick and Bartleby, Melville interrogates the culturally accepted descriptions of pity and explores the reasons for the limits in human pity he observed and depicted. In an attempt to understand whether the feelings of pity that a patient's suffering can evoke in physicians are sustainable, desirable, or counter-productive, Melville's narratives, along with that of a woman who, while living with advanced cancer experiences the breakdown of a key medical relationship, will be considered.
Relevant Article
- Lessons in pity and caring from Dickens and Melville
- Deborah Kirklin
Med. Humanit. 2008 34: 57-58.[Extract] [Full Text] [PDF]
This article has been cited by other articles:
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Kirklin, D.
(2008). Lessons in pity and caring from Dickens and Melville. Med. Humanities
34: 57-58
[Full Text]
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