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Arthur Kleinman

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Arthur Kleinman



Average rating: 4.11 · 2,331 ratings · 166 reviews · 62 distinct worksSimilar authors
The Illness Narratives: Suf...

4.17 avg rating — 551 ratings — published 1988 — 15 editions
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The Soul of Care: The Moral...

4.07 avg rating — 473 ratings17 editions
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What Really Matters: Living...

3.88 avg rating — 204 ratings — published 2006 — 12 editions
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Rethinking Psychiatry: From...

4.17 avg rating — 75 ratings — published 1988 — 10 editions
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Patients and Healers in the...

4.18 avg rating — 65 ratings — published 1980 — 4 editions
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Deep China: The Moral Life ...

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4.02 avg rating — 66 ratings — published 2011 — 9 editions
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Writing at the Margin: Disc...

4.17 avg rating — 52 ratings — published 1996 — 8 editions
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Social Suffering

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4.14 avg rating — 50 ratings — published 1997 — 5 editions
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Culture and Depression: Stu...

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really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 27 ratings — published 1985 — 7 editions
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Social Origins of Distress ...

4.06 avg rating — 17 ratings — published 1988 — 4 editions
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Quotes by Arthur Kleinman  (?)
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“We tend to think of dangers and uncertainties as anomalies in the continuum of life, or irruptions of unpredictable forces into a largely predictable world. I suggest the contrary: that dangers and uncertainties are an inescapable dimension of life. In fact, as we shall come to understand, they make life matter. They define what it means to be human.”
Arthur Kleinman

“Today, our view of genuine reality is increasingly clouded by professionals whose technical expertise often introduces a superficial and soulless model of the person that denies moral significance. Perhaps the most devastating example for human values is the process of medicalization through which ordinary unhappiness and normal bereavement have been transformed into clinical depression, existential angst turned into anxiety disorders, and the moral consequences of political violence recast as post-traumatic stress disorder. That is, suffering is redefined as mental illness and treated by professional experts, typically with medication. I believe that this diminishes the person,”
Arthur Kleinman, What Really Matters: Living a Moral Life amidst Uncertainty and Danger

“Yet when the denial becomes so complete that we live under what amounts to a tyranny of not seeing and not speaking the existential truth, it becomes dangerous itself. This is what makes the closest and deepest experiences of catastrophe, loss, and failure so”
Arthur Kleinman, What Really Matters: Living a Moral Life amidst Uncertainty and Danger



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