It’s about time for untimely action
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.17267/2594-7907ijeh.2023.e5389Keywords:
Untimeliness, Literature, Illness, Caring, CreativityAbstract
Illness, but also caring for the ill and mourning the dead, requires allowing oneself to experience a different time, an embodied untimeliness where different rhythms coexist, removed from the speedy tumult of those for whom health is no immediate concern. Rather than a chronological flow, it is a kairotic time, which is sensitive to the context, and allows wanderings and repetitions, hesitations, and changes in pace[1]. Caring and mourning demands “untimeliness and disadjustment of the contemporary[2].” In that sense, the intimate experience of illness is comparable to a form of creativity.
Downloads
References
(1) Biron C. Jardin radio. Montréal: Le Quartanier; 2022.
(2) Derrida J. Specters of Marx: the state of the debt, the work of mourning, and the New international. New York: Routledge; 1994.
(3) Pender K. “Kairos” and the Subject of Expressive Discourse. Composition Studies. 2003;31(2):91–106. Available from: https://www.jstor.org/stable/43501556
(4) Nietzsche F. Untimely meditations. Cambridge; New York: Cambridge University Press; 1997.
(5) Agamben G. What is the contemporary? In: Agamben G. What is an apparatus? and other essays. Stanford University Press; 2009. p. 39–54.
(6) Canguilhem G. The normal and the pathological. New York: Zone Books; 1989.
(7) Marin C. Hors de moi. Paris: Allia; 2008.
(8) Cooper A, Rodman A. AI and Medical Education — A 21st-Century Pandora’s Box. N Engl J Med. 2023 Aug 3;389(5):385–7. https://doi.org/10.1056/NEJMp2304993
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2023 Benjamin Gagnon Chainey
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.