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Chekhov's Sakhalin Journey Jonathan Cole (Bournemouth University, UK)

Chekhov's Sakhalin Journey By Jonathan Cole (Bournemouth University, UK)

Chekhov's Sakhalin Journey by Jonathan Cole (Bournemouth University, UK)


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Chekhov's Sakhalin Journey Summary

Chekhov's Sakhalin Journey: Doctor, Humanitarian, Writer by Jonathan Cole (Bournemouth University, UK)

Chekhov often said that 'I am a doctor by trade and sometimes I do literary work in my free time', a surprising claim, given his status as a giant of 20th century drama. This literary-biographical study uncovers new sides to him, as both a medical professional and humanitarian, and tells the story of Chekhov's trip to Sakhalin Island in the harsh wastes of Siberia. Anton Chekhov practiced medicine for most of his life and engaged in humanitarian work which took him away from writing for months. He placed one such trip though, across the unforgiving terrain of Siberia to write about the penal island of Sakhalin, above all others. Chekhov's Sakhalin Journey, written by a neuroscientist and practicing clinician, uses this trip and Chekhov's own account of it to shed light on hitherto overlooked aspects of his life. In doing so, it shows that to understand the man we need his medicine as well as his literature, and we need to assess his life from his perspective as well as ours.

About Jonathan Cole (Bournemouth University, UK)

Jonathan Cole is a professor of clinical neuroscience at University Hospitals, Dorset and the University of Bournemouth. He trained in Oxford and the Middlesex Hospital, London. As a medical student he spent time seeing patients in the Bronx with Oliver Sacks, who remained a friend. In addition to 200 or so academic papers/chapters, he has also explored first person, narrative accounts of neurological conditions. He has published books on severe loss of sensation, Pride and a Daily Marathon and Losing Touch; spinal cord injury, Still Lives; and facial disfigurement, About Face and The Invisible Smile, all describing what it is like to live with the conditions. His work was used in two plays by Peter Brook, The Man Who and The Valley of Astonishment. He also made an award winning BBC Horizon, The Man Who Lost His Body, as well as many other TV science documentaries in the UK, Europe, Australia and the US. He has appeared on BBC Start The Week, Thinking Allowed, Night Waves (with Jonathan Miller), All in the Mind, Does He Take Sugar, BBC World Service (with Doris Lessing), Front Row, (with Siobhan Davies) and NPR (USA). His books have been widely reviewed: Sunday Times, Observer, a Guardian feature, Nature, TLS, THES, Brain, JAMA, Annals Neurology, New Scientist, etc.

Table of Contents

Prologue Introduction Chapter One; Medical School Chapter Two; Why Chapter Three; Going to War Chapter Four; Everything is chained Chapter Five; The Chasm of Sorrow Chapter Six; South Chapter Seven; Thesis Assembled Chapter Eight; Numbers Chapter Nine; Monday to Wednesday Chapter Ten; Duelling with himself Chapter Eleven; Conscience, irony and understatement Chapter Twelve; Holy of Holies Postscript: Sakhalin Now Bibliography

Additional information

NPB9781350367517
9781350367517
1350367516
Chekhov's Sakhalin Journey: Doctor, Humanitarian, Writer by Jonathan Cole (Bournemouth University, UK)
New
Paperback
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
2023-12-14
240
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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