Zhang Yue sits alone on a windowsill, her cropped hair is orchid white,her skin is infused with light. Porcelain skin may be considered one of the Ten Commandments of Classical Chinese Beauty yet the children at the orphanage where Yue lives don' t want to play with an albino. This high-key image by Beijing photographer and journalist Zhang Lijie (born in 1980) offers a challenge to what essayist and critic Susan Sontag described as the “sustained look downward” of documentary photography. Typically documentary photographs are monochromatic images that denote objectivity, purity and facticity. Most often the subjects are the downtrodden, the diseased, the destitute. Yet Zhang Lijie, who has been documenting the lives of disabled people in China since 2006, considers her sitters to be “precious, as it is a privilege to confront issues”.
作者簡介
暫缺《中國醫(yī)學人文評論(2016)》作者簡介
圖書目錄
Introduction: Chinese Medical Humanities Review 2016 Daniel Vuillermin, Institute for Medical Humanities, Peking University Towards a Chinese Medical Humanities With China in Mind: Reflections on Film, Medicine, the Body and Teaching Chinese Medical Humanities Michael J. Clark, Centre for the Humanities and Health, King's College London Medical Humanities and Empathy: An Experimental Study Guo Liping, Wei Jihong, Li Yanfeng, and Li Han, Institute for Medical Humanities, Peking University International Conference on Medical Humanities: Madness and Society Old Cures in New Spaces: The Psychopathic Hospital in 1930s Beijing and Shanghai Emily Baum, School ofHumanities, University ofCalifornia, Irvine Contemporary Disorders and Complicated Discourses: Anorexia Nervosa in Nineteenth-Century Britain and Modern China Rhea Sookdeosingh, History ofMedicine, St Cross College, The University of Oxford International Conference on Medical Humanities: Film and the Body Multimodal Discourse Analysis of a Film Poster: One Flew Over the Cuckoo' s Nest Huang Fang, Institute for Medical Humanities, Peking University One Flew Over the Cuckoo' s Nest and Disciplinary Power: A Foucauldian Analysis Liu Jinghui, Institute for Medical Humanities, Peking University A Full Circle for the Elderly: An Analysis of Hospice Care in China Yan Zhiying, Institute for Medical Humanities, Peking University The Jefferson Institute and Organ Transplantation in China: A Bioethical Analysis of Coma (1978) and its Implications for China Han Zhaomin, Shen Ying, and Zhao Yingxi, Institute for Medical Humanities, Peking University Notes from Overseas Teaching Medical Humanities/Social Medicine at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Lai Lili, Institute for Medical Humanities, Peking University A Year Abroad at Department of History and Philosophy of Science, the University of Cambridge Chen Qi, Institute for Medical Humanities, Peking University Book Reviews Mei Fong, One Child: The Story of China' s Most Radical Experiment (2016) Daniel Vuillermin, Institute for Medical Humanities, Peking University Narrative Medicine: Honoring Stories of Illness Duan Ruojuan, Zhang Hongbin, and Lu Ning, Department of Foreign Languages, Kunming Medical University Contributors