Whose Story is it? Narrative Humility in Medicine and Literature

Authors

  • Sayantani DasGupta Columbia University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.2218/forum.27.2904

Abstract

I am on a panel. It is at a college, a conference, or a literary festival. It happens on almost every panel I am on; particularly when we are discussing representation and diversity in children’s literature – the importance for young people to see protagonists, families and story lines representing their own identities and their own lives. Someone – usually white, and/or straight, and/or cis-gendered -- raises their hand in the audience and tells us about a story they feel compelled to write, a story they love, a story about a protagonist unlike themselves. “Can I tell this story?” they ask, “Is it alright?”

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Published

21-Dec-2018

How to Cite

DasGupta, Sayantani. 2018. “Whose Story Is It? Narrative Humility in Medicine and Literature”. FORUM: University of Edinburgh Postgraduate Journal of Culture & The Arts, no. 27 (December). https://doi.org/10.2218/forum.27.2904.

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Section

Guest Contributions