Narrative medicine, between concept and clinical practice: From the narrative-object to the effacement of the “being-demanding-to-be-said”?
Type de matériel :
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The ambitions of narrative medicine are clearly expressed at two levels: the readiness of practitioners to intimately receive sick people’s stories and the narratological training of students allowing them to use these stories to improve care. Despite these laudable intentions, many reservations arise. The person whose experience needs to be shared, who Ricœur calls “l’être-à-dire” (being-demanding-to-be-said) is threatened with effacement at the same time as their narration is objectified by the narratological tool. This double risk needs to be identified and analyzed in the light of the philosophical frameworks invoked by narrative medicine itself.
Réseaux sociaux