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Waiting, strange: transplant recipient experience, medical time and queer/crip temporalities

People who receive a ‘solid’ organ transplant from a deceased person may experience imaginative challenges in making sense of how the transfer impacts their own past and future, as shown in existing scholarship. Building on such work, this article considers how the temporalities of medical encounter...

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Autor principal: Wasson, Sara
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BMJ Publishing Group 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8639908/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34049924
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/medhum-2021-012141
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author Wasson, Sara
author_facet Wasson, Sara
author_sort Wasson, Sara
collection PubMed
description People who receive a ‘solid’ organ transplant from a deceased person may experience imaginative challenges in making sense of how the transfer impacts their own past and future, as shown in existing scholarship. Building on such work, this article considers how the temporalities of medical encounter itself may also become temporally ambiguous, posing representational challenges both pre-transplantation and post-transplantation. The dominant narrative of transplant in transplantation journals and hospital communications, both clinical and patient-facing, presents surgery as a healing moment, yet the recipient’s experience of hospital, pharmacology and daily self-monitoring may be disorienting in multiple ways which resist conventional conceptions of medical temporalities of cure. Examining memoirs by Robert Pensack and Richard McCann, this article suggests the transplant temporalities may be fruitfully approached through scholarship of ‘queering’ time and ‘crip’ time. While the medical narrative of transplant focuses on the event of transplantation, these texts construct post-transplant time as still profoundly structured by waiting, expectation and suspense, the transformed body less healed than permanently contingent and fragile in different ways. I do not purport to uncover the ‘truth’ of bleak survival hidden within a story of the miraculous. Rather, I am reaching for a critical practice to recognise subtle entanglements of medicalised time, and identify a tension and synthesis between miracle and the chronic, an insight which may also be of service for other critical approaches to memoir of heroic medicine.
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spelling pubmed-86399082021-12-15 Waiting, strange: transplant recipient experience, medical time and queer/crip temporalities Wasson, Sara Med Humanit Original Research People who receive a ‘solid’ organ transplant from a deceased person may experience imaginative challenges in making sense of how the transfer impacts their own past and future, as shown in existing scholarship. Building on such work, this article considers how the temporalities of medical encounter itself may also become temporally ambiguous, posing representational challenges both pre-transplantation and post-transplantation. The dominant narrative of transplant in transplantation journals and hospital communications, both clinical and patient-facing, presents surgery as a healing moment, yet the recipient’s experience of hospital, pharmacology and daily self-monitoring may be disorienting in multiple ways which resist conventional conceptions of medical temporalities of cure. Examining memoirs by Robert Pensack and Richard McCann, this article suggests the transplant temporalities may be fruitfully approached through scholarship of ‘queering’ time and ‘crip’ time. While the medical narrative of transplant focuses on the event of transplantation, these texts construct post-transplant time as still profoundly structured by waiting, expectation and suspense, the transformed body less healed than permanently contingent and fragile in different ways. I do not purport to uncover the ‘truth’ of bleak survival hidden within a story of the miraculous. Rather, I am reaching for a critical practice to recognise subtle entanglements of medicalised time, and identify a tension and synthesis between miracle and the chronic, an insight which may also be of service for other critical approaches to memoir of heroic medicine. BMJ Publishing Group 2021-12 2021-05-28 /pmc/articles/PMC8639908/ /pubmed/34049924 http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/medhum-2021-012141 Text en © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2021. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 Unported (CC BY 4.0) license, which permits others to copy, redistribute, remix, transform and build upon this work for any purpose, provided the original work is properly cited, a link to the licence is given, and indication of whether changes were made. See: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.
spellingShingle Original Research
Wasson, Sara
Waiting, strange: transplant recipient experience, medical time and queer/crip temporalities
title Waiting, strange: transplant recipient experience, medical time and queer/crip temporalities
title_full Waiting, strange: transplant recipient experience, medical time and queer/crip temporalities
title_fullStr Waiting, strange: transplant recipient experience, medical time and queer/crip temporalities
title_full_unstemmed Waiting, strange: transplant recipient experience, medical time and queer/crip temporalities
title_short Waiting, strange: transplant recipient experience, medical time and queer/crip temporalities
title_sort waiting, strange: transplant recipient experience, medical time and queer/crip temporalities
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8639908/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34049924
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/medhum-2021-012141
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