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Facing death : where culture, religion, and medicine meet / edited by Howard M. Spiro ... [et al.].

Contributor(s): Spiro, Howard M. (Howard Marget), 1924- | Yale University. Program for Humanities in Medicine | Goethe-Institut (Boston, Mass.).
Material type: TextTextPublisher: New Haven ; London : Yale University Press, c1996Description: xxii, 212p. : ill. ; 24 cm.Content type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 0300063490 :.Subject(s): Terminally ill | Death -- Psychological aspects | Death -- Religious aspects | Death -- Moral and ethical aspects | DeathDDC classification: 155.937
Contents:
We have learned a great deal about keeping death at bay through medical technology. We are less well informed, however, about how to face death and how to understand or articulate the emotional and spiritual needs of the dying. This book brings together medical experts and authorities in the humanities to reflect on medical, cultural and religious responses to death. The book should help both medical personnel and patients to view death less as an adversary and more as a defining part of life. In the first half of the book, physicians and the founder of hospice discuss the current clinical setting for dying, with attempts to find the balance between alleviating suffering and life support, the problem of finding a peaceful death and the differences the AIDS epidemic has made in our attitudes toward dying. In the second half of the book, theologians, historians of religion, anthropologists, literary scholars and pastors describe Christian, Judaic, Islamic, Hindu and Chinese per-ceptions of death and rituals of mourning. An epilogue con-siders the resonances between medicine and the humanities, as well as the essential differences in their approaches to death.
List(s) this item appears in: Wellbeing | Wellbeing SVUH
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Item type Current location Collection Call number Status Notes Date due Barcode
Standard Loan SVUH Library
Wellbeing Collection W362.175 (Browse shelf) Available Wellbeing Collection T13050

Includes index.

'Prepared under the auspices of the Program for Humanities in Medicine, Yale University School of Medicine and the Goethe-Institut, Boston'.

Includes bibliographies and index.

We have learned a great deal about keeping death at bay through medical technology. We are less well informed, however, about how to face death and how to understand or articulate the emotional and spiritual needs of the dying. This book brings together medical experts and authorities in the humanities to reflect on medical, cultural and religious responses to death. The book should help both medical personnel and patients to view death less as an adversary and more as a defining part of life. In the first half of the book, physicians and the founder of hospice discuss the current clinical setting for dying, with attempts to find the balance between alleviating suffering and life support, the problem of finding a peaceful death and the differences the AIDS epidemic has made in our attitudes toward dying. In the second half of the book, theologians, historians of religion, anthropologists, literary scholars and pastors describe Christian, Judaic, Islamic, Hindu and Chinese per-ceptions of death and rituals of mourning. An epilogue con-siders the resonances between medicine and the humanities, as well as the essential differences in their approaches to death.

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