Читать книгу The Rise of Autobiographical Medical Poetry and the Medical Humanities - Johanna Emeney - Страница 9

Peripherally, it is also noteworthy that Jo Shapcott’s Of Mutability (2010) received much praise from reviewer Kate Kellaway (2010) of The Observer for its very obliqueness—its avoidance of the medical realities. For Shapcott had been diagnosed with breast cancer in 2003, and she underwent surgery followed by both chemotherapy and radiotherapy. All of these facts appear as elements of Of Mutability. However:

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Cancer is not mentioned—never dignified with a name. It is characteristic of Shapcott to avoid the banality of straight autobiography. Instead, her illness exists as an anarchic rabble of cells in the body of her texts: “Too many of the best cells in my body/are itching, feeling jagged, turning raw/in this spring chill… (Kellaway 2010, par. 4)

The Rise of Autobiographical Medical Poetry and the Medical Humanities

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