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(BQ) As Joanna Bourke shows in this fascinating investigation, people have come up with many different answers to these questions over time. And a history of pain can tell us a great deal about how we might respond to our own suffering in the present - and, just as importantly, to the suffering of those around us.

6 Gesture Some acute observers have drawn such secrets from the expression of the countenance, that it has been to them the place almost of all other symptoms (Peter Mere Latham, 1837)1 W ords are never enough Pain is communicated through gestures, inarticulate utterances, facial expressions, posture, and other nonlinguistic movements of the body A piece of doggerel, published in The London Hospital Gazette in 1900, satirized this aspect of pain in the context of a person having a tooth extracted Once seated in the dentist’s chair, the patient regresses He squirms, an’ squeals, an’ screeches, sometimes I gives a shout, I weeps, an’ wails, an’ wriggles, and wags my tongue about I shrieks, an’ kicks, an’ scratches, and then I tries to bite.2 Some of these gestures are performances, that is, deliberate signs conveyed by people-in-pain seeking sympathy and succour Others arise from some unconscious realm, rooted in physiological impulses or assimilated involuntarily during processes of socialization Irrespective of origin, a world of meaning is conveyed in the whimper, the wince, the sweat on the upper lip, the tremor, the shuffle, the shielding motion, the closed fist resting on the bed linen, the compulsive rubbing, and the shrill cry ‘Ouch!’ In the words of an unnamed mother writing in 1819, ‘bodily torture’ was ‘too palpably indicated by the starting dew, the cold brow, the blanched lip, and bloodless cheek’.3 Functional behaviours—such as excessive sleeping or assuming the foetal position in bed—also quietly convey a message of suffering, as acts that deliberately attempt to suggest that gestures are being suppressed 16 g e sture (the stoical pursing of the lips or the stiffened gait, for instance) For convenience, I will be referring to these physiological responses (sweating, pallor, or muscular tension), facial expressions (grimacing), and paralinguistic vocalizations (groaning or screaming) as ‘gestural languages’ It is important, however, to acknowledge the intentional or self-reflective nature of some of these languages and not others Gestural languages are invaluable to the assessment of pain Witnesses to pain ‘depend upon the sufferer of pain for all information about its amount and its quality’, physician John Kent Spender noted in his prize-winning essay of 1874, but they not rely on language alone Thankfully, Spender reminded his readers, the ‘gestures and postures which a sufferer exhibits; the cries, the pathos, the very tone of the voice; the expression and the changes of countenance’ are all clues to the person’s sufferings.4 Indeed, disembodied, abstract speech sounds are a small component of face-to-face communication Formal linguistic mechanisms, such as vocabulary, syntax, tense, intonation, and so on, routinely fail to convey even a minuscule part of the person-in-pain’s lived experience.The body itself is a semiotic instrument Agony is ‘stamped on every feature’; it ‘speaks in every line of the countenance’, as the author of ‘The Toothache’ (1849) noted.5 Typically, descriptions of pain-gestures adopt metaphors and analogies borrowed from textual sources As poet William Cowper put it, ‘I am  .  persuaded that faces are as legible as books’, with the advantage that ‘they are read in much less time, and are much less likely to deceive’.6 Academic analyses too are partial to the textual metaphor, earnestly presenting the body as a ‘semiotic instrument’, claiming that pain is ‘written on the countenance’, and even proposing (as I here) that bodily movements are ‘gestural languages’ However, it is important not to get (metaphorically) carried away Crucially, gestural signs of pain can constitute a separate, and sometimes even autonomous, component of communication As historian Michael Braddick observes, gestures ‘punctuate speech’, but they also complement, enhance, replace, or serve as alternatives to speech; they may even ‘constitute a distinct domain of communicative action’.7 Gestures and bodily expressions not simply contribute to those linguistic meanings given to pain, but may independently constitute meaning as well Surprisingly, then, gestures have only recently attracted the attention of historians.8 In part, this is due to the assumed transient qualities of face, hand, and body movements Historians have tended to favour approaches that analyse tangible objects embedded in archaeological sites, archives, and g e sture 161 la culture matérielle As philosopher Francis Bacon put it, gestures are ‘transitory Hieroglyphics’: like hieroglyphics they ‘abide not’ However, he continued, they also ‘have evermore  .  an affinity with the thing signified’.9 This was perhaps what cultural theorist Pierre Bourdieu had in mind when he observed that it was precisely ‘because agents never know completely what they are doing’ that ‘what they has more sense than they know’.10 It was an insight that Freud used to startling effect As we will see, despite the almost feverish insistence that the body-in-pain speaks a ‘natural’ language, it turns out that it moves in highly staged, historically contingent, and contextually intricate ways Gestures of Suffering in the Clinic The unmistakable gestural aspects of pain were particularly poignant en masse This was what Joseph Townend (in the chapter on ‘Religion’) meant when he reflected upon his time as a patient in the Manchester Infirmary in the middle of the nineteenth century He wrote eloquently of the ‘world of woe compressed within the walls of that hospital!’ ‘Here’, he remarked, was ‘a convulsive sob; there a deep groan; yonder a piercing shriek What dreary, lonely nights, and how deep and solemn the midnight tongue of time, as heard by the agonised, wakeful patients!’11 From the perspective of his hospital bed, communication was entirely gestural Townend conceived of pain as a convulsion, deeply embedded within damaged flesh Pain swallowed up entire worlds, compressed them into claustrophobic spaces, and destroyed the possibility of coherent communion with others.With agonizing slowness, the ‘tongue of time’ spoke all night, demanding that its victims remain wakeful throughout their ordained hours of torment Similar metaphors were used three-quarters of a century later, albeit in the context of a wartime Field Hospital rather than a pauper one Like Townend, Robert Wistrand emphasized the gestural performances of people-in-pain In his poem ‘Field Hospital’ (1944), words had been banished, forcing wounded men to make ‘language out of sobs’, as ‘evocative as song’ For Wistrand, Here words are out of bounds The pulse of silence throbs Reason, licking wounds, Makes language out of sobs 16 g e sture Evocative as song The literate groans explain That terror’s clumsy hand Pokes at the source of pain Words are flecked with foam They spread a stain of sound But thought is haunted home By voices underground.12 Wistrand’s Field Hospital was a place where reason had been banished Language was incapable of conveying the horror of combat and wounding: words were nothing more than blood-specked foam Terrifying thoughts of what they had gone through only exacerbated the men’s suffering; their memories kept pain alive by continuing to clumsily prod their wounds The only ‘literate’ language that remained was that of groans Townend’s and Wistrand’s evocations of the writhing body-in-pain, stripped of articulate language, were unremittingly negative Both were writing as wounded men, crushed in the pitiless crucibles of the cotton mills of early industrialization and the battlefields of modernity In contrast, physicians and other caregivers could go to the opposite extreme: for them, gestural languages might be important in at least three ways: physiologically, they were sometimes beneficial (even for the person-in-pain); they might elicit sympathy from witnesses; and they might provide valuable diagnostic clues In all three cases, we shall see, there were important shifts over the centuries The first function of gestural expressiveness was that it could help the healing process Throughout the period explored in this book, both anecdotal and experimental evidence suggested that gestures (such as stroking the arm of the person-in-pain) effectively reduced the sufferer’s subjective experience of pain Commentators adhering to a vast array of traditions (including humoral, nervous, biomedical, holistic, and neurological ones) insisted upon this positive function of gestures The point here, though, is a different one: prior to the biochemical revolution of the twentieth century, with its obsessive interest in the total eradication of the ‘evil’ that was pain, commentators routinely insisted that the expressive face, contorted body, and inarticulate groans of a person-in-pain might often be physiologically necessary if a suffering person was to find respite This was the point of an article entitled ‘Crying,Weeping, and Sighing’ (1852), in which the author advised people experiencing ‘bodily pain’ to cry loudly because g e sture 16 this would have the effect of ‘diminishing the circulation of the pulmonary arteries’ and ‘unloading the left heart and large arteries, of any surplus quantity of blood’.13 As a mid-nineteenth-century expert in diseases of the testes and rectum explained, ‘cries and groans, though denoting pain, really serve to alleviate suffering, and to counteract the shock produced by it’.14 The Lancet also referred to this aspect of pain in an article published in 1904 According to the author, the ‘cry of pain’ was important for the person doing the crying Indeed, the person who uttered the cry did not even need to hear his own vocalization He would be equally relieved if his ears were stopped and he did not hear his own cry, so long as he was conscious of performing the muscular exercises that should result in such a cry The ‘relief of his sufferings’ required the spontaneous and ‘violent expenditure of nerve force’, which ‘Nature provides’.15 Conversely, too much self-control in extreme pain-states was physiologically damaging: this explained why a man who ‘made no signs of great suffering during a military flogging’ subsequently ‘dropped down lifeless’.16 Refusing to express oneself through gestures was destructive because it denied the organism a diversion from the ‘excitability and excitement’ intrinsic to bodily torment This was the point made in 1834 by a distinguished Pennsylvania physician He warned against gestural restraint by giving the example of a gentleman who was ‘about to be cut for the [kidney] stone’, without anaesthetic, of course.The doctor deplored the fact that ‘this gentleman thought it beneath the dignity of a man, to express pain upon any occasion’ and described how the patient refused to submit to the usual precaution of securing the hands and feet by bandages, declaring to his surgeon, he had nothing to fear from his being untied, as he would not move a muscle of his body,—and he truly kept his word: but he died instantly after the operation from apoplexy By refusing to allow the ‘natural’ expressivity of the body, the man provided no outlet or diversion for the ‘excitability and excitement’ of intense pain.17 Death would have been averted if he had screamed and struggled There was another way that gestural languages might help the healing process This was the opposite of the one just mentioned It had long been observed that facial expressions possessed a kind of ‘feedback mechanism’: facial movements could actually influence the ‘feeling’ of being in pain A person who adopted the external signs of extreme agony might increase 164 g e sture her subjective feeling of pain Conversely, the deliberate donning of a placid face might help soothe a person’s distress In the words of philosopher Edmund Burke, ‘I have often observed, that on mimicking the looks and gestures of the angry, or placid, or frightened, or daring men, I have involuntarily found my mind turned to that passion, whose appearance I endeavoured to imitate.’18 Much later, William James in ‘What is an Emotion?’ (1884) devoted considerable space to this phenomenon, as did Charles Darwin, who wrote in The Expressions of the Emotions in Man and Animals that ‘He who gives way to violent gestures will increase his rage; he who does not control the signs of fear will experience fear in a greater degree’.19 More recently, psychologist Paul Ekman found that when people were asked to make the expressions for negative emotions such as anger, disgust, and fear, rather than positive ones (like happiness), their heart rate quickened and they began sweating Even more interesting, 78 per cent of the subjects claimed that they felt the emotion they were asked to generate In other words, voluntarily performed facial muscular actions result in ‘involutary [sic] changes in autonomic nervous system (ANS) activity’.20 Secondly, gestural languages functioned as a tool for social cohesion.This argument had been made throughout the centuries Pain-gestures were functional in the sense that they were expected to elicit sympathetic responses from witnesses ‘Sobs, loud complaints, all forms of groaning are useful’, physiologist Paolo Mantegazza reminded readers in 1904, ‘because thereby we excite in those who listen to us a compassion, which may be of aid to us’.21 In recent years, different explanations have been posited.The most radical have been drawn from evolutionary theory As psychologists put it in the official journal of the International Association for the Study of Pain, ‘A general tendency to know that others are hurt would clearly confer an adaptive advantage to the group, insofar as the perceptual ability is linked to lending assistance or feeling threatened in times of peril’.22 I will explore this function of pain-expressions in the chapter entitled ‘Sympathy’, but it is worth noting here that witnesses to the pained-face might reject the plea, turning away from suffering Indeed, gestural languages were dependent upon the presence of a particular human face: one that could be recognized as ‘expressive of pain’ Certain people were observed not to show pain on their faces: indeed, in one experiment in 1995, between 13 and 50 per cent of volunteers displayed no facial evidence of pain, despite receiving severe pain stimuli.23 In other cases, it was found that some faces were ‘easier to g e sture 165 read’ than others; and certain people (women, people with chronic pain sufferers in their families, and non-professionals) were better at reading them.24 A study conducted in the 1990s, for example, found that when observers relied on expressive behaviour alone to evaluate pain, their reports were between 50 to 80 per cent lower than the patients’ verbal reports of the amount of pain they were experiencing.25 According to one of the most influential scientists working in the field, facial expressions gave no more than ‘coarse distinctions among patients’ pain states’ and were likely to ‘systematically downgrade the intensity of a patient’s suffering’.26 Gestures and Diagnosis The third argument about the value of gestural languages asked whether they were diagnostically constructive This is the other side of the debates in the last chapter about the diagnostic value of narrative Simply by observing a patient, a doctor would know whether her pain was organic or ‘stimulative or sympathetic’, for example As The London Encyclopædia informed readers in 1829, patients experiencing pain as a result of ‘organic disease’ bore ‘a continued sharpness and fixedness of feature which is very observable, and which the mere nervous patient is without’.When the stomach or liver was causing pain, ‘this fixed cast of countenance’ would be ‘accompanied by a peculiar anxiety of expression, or rather perhaps, I should say, of despondent indication’.27 The view that chronic conditions were ‘set’ in a person’s face was also common In 1886, for instance, phrenologists concluded that just as ‘habitual states of mind tend to produce habitual forms and expressions of face and body’, any person who experienced prolonged pain would ‘have in the face an expression of the internal state’.28 Pain left its mark on the expressive body The same was true of acute pain When a physician in 1817 was called to minister to a man with a ‘pendulous projection’ emerging from his anus, no words were needed since the ‘expression of this gentleman’s face was quite indicative of his suffering’.29 Neuralgia, too, ‘spoke’ in distinctive gestures.‘When the paroxysm comes on’, a physician in 1816 observed, the sufferer’s whole body is convulsed from the excess of agony; the eyes are intensely closed; and tears trickle down the cheek; the mouth is distorted, and, with the whole cheek, quivers; the body unconsciously waves backwards and forwards, 16 g e sture and the foot of the distressed side is involuntarily moved in conformity with the flexure of the body.30 As a surgeon observed a century later, physicians only had to observe the ‘pinched features, the knotted brow, the rolling eyes with widely dilated pupils, the ashen countenance’, to know that they were witnessing pain.The patient’s hands might be ‘alternately clenched and opened, grasping wildly at surrounding objects or persons’, or they might be ‘pressed firmly over the painful area’, but, in either case, there would be ‘cries and groans  .  bodily contortions and writhings’.31 Indeed, authentic pain-vocalizations could be rendered in musical notation As Colombat de L’Isere explained in A Treatise Upon the Diseases and Hygiene of the Organs of the Voice (1857), ‘every pain has its particular intonation’, and he even insisted that, by listening carefully to the tone, register, and pitch of pain-vocalizations, surgeons and physicians could more accurately diagnose the cause of suffering In his words, I have observed, that cries caused by the application of fire are grave and deep, and that the double sound resulting from them may be represented by the base octave and its third; for example, the I have just mentioned, and the mi on the first line Cries which are drawn forth by the action of a cutting instrument during an operation are acute and piercing, and may be expressed, at first, by a rapid sound, or a double crotchet of the middle octave, which will be about sol on the second line; and afterwards, and almost at the same time, by a very acute and prolonged sound, or a semibreve of the octave of the faucette, which gives sol above the staff He went on to insist that the ‘cries from the tearing pains of labor’ were ‘more acute and intense than all the others’ He described their ‘peculiar expression’ as being & h h x ˙ U q H U q H h E H Figure 6.1 The Music of Pain: ‘Every Pain has its Peculiar Intonation’, from Colombat de L’Isere, A Treatise Upon the Diseases and Hygiene of the Organs of the Voice, 1st pub 1834, trans J F W Lane (Boston: Redding and Co., 1857), 85 Image from Carl Ludwig Merkel, Anatomie und Physiologie des menschlichen Stimm- und Sprach-organs (Anthropophonik) (Leipzig:Verlag von Ambrosius Abel, 1863), 638 g e sture 167 represented by the base octave and the seventeenth; for example, the and re, upon the sharp of the second register It seems that the atrocious pangs of labor elevate the diapason of the voice, and at the same time augment its extent.32 The body-in-pain was a vocal instrument, unerringly echoing the character of suffering from surgery, being burnt, or giving birth Many physicians swore that observing gestural languages alone could result in accurate diagnoses In ‘The Significance of Pain’ (1896), for instance, W H Thomson provided physicians with a detailed semaphore of pain gestures, illuminating subtle distinctions based on spatial and tactile interactions between the patient and his surroundings He observed that sufferers of inflammatory pains avoided touching ‘the painful part, or he approaches it in a respectful way’, while those with arthritis could not stop their hand from passing ‘over the joint in a hovering fashion’ The ‘diffused soreness of a mucous membrane inflammation’ caused sufferers to lay their hands on their sternum (breastbone) and then pass it ‘over and across the chest’ In contrast, a ‘similar movement of the hand across the abdomen never means a peritonitis, but a catarrhal intestinal inflammation’, while, with pleurisy, ‘the tips of the straightened fingers are used to indicate the stabbing nature of the pain’ (the tips of the figures are ‘brought down with very much more caution’ in cases of peritonitis, he patiently explained) Even pain-gestures produced by tumours, abscesses, or cramps were distinctive, causing sufferers to touch the affected part, forcibly grasp their abdomen, or (in the case of colic) make a ‘characteristic radiation’ movement For Thompson, different gestures were ‘characteristic of the different varieties of pain’ and were superior to verbal descriptions, which were ‘so extremely indefinite’.33 John Musser’s A Practical Treatise of Medical Diagnosis for Students and Physicians (1901) also placed great emphasis on the precise diagnostic value of posture and gesture Physicians should observe the sudden fixity of heart-pang; the retracted head of meningitis; the immobile side of pleurisy; the crouching attitude or restlessness of colic; the flexed thighs and immobile trunk of peritonitis; the shoulder drooping to the affected side in renal colic; or the bent knee of arthritis.34 A similar, diagnostic aim was pursued by René Leriche when, in The Surgery of Pain (1938), he described a consultation with a man suffering from trigeminal neuralgia (or tic douloureux, an agonizing nerve disorder of the face) He instructed readers to 16 g e sture Look at him: while you are speaking to him, there he is listening to you, calm, normal, perhaps a little preoccupied Of a sudden, he becomes rigid: the pain is there His face becomes screwed up There is depicted in it a terrible expression of pain, of grievous pain His eyes are closed, his face is drawn, his features distorted And immediately he lays his hand on his cheek, presses it against his nose, sometimes rubbing it vigorously; or, more frequently, he remains rigid in his pain, which appears to bring everything in him to a stop In fact, everything is arrested for the moment, and you yourself are pulled up short, not daring to make a movement, and even restraining yourself from speaking.35 For Leriche, the inimitable expressions of agonizing pain were communicative in two senses On the one hand, they served as a uni-directional message from the sufferer to his physician, thus aiding diagnosis On the other hand, Leriche believed that gestural languages were transmittable (or to use the language of eighteenth-century physiologists, they were ‘sympathetic’), in the sense that witnesses to pain were unwittingly compelled to freeze in horror Both kinds of bodies ‘spoke’ the inarticulate, yet unmistakable, language of distress Learning to See There is nothing ‘natural’ about such gestures, however From the moment of birth, infants observe the facial expressions of people around them; they mimic their bodily movements When the child falls over, caregivers cluck, coo, rub, and ‘kiss it better’ Children are taught when to ‘have a good cry’ and when ‘not to be a baby’ Indeed, there is a vast literature documenting the different ‘gestural styles’ in pain-instructions, with rules and expectations varying by age, ethnicity, religious beliefs, and so on Gender expectations are particularly striking In one study of expressions of pain amongst Arab-American girls and boys, for instance, the boys noted that pain made them feel ‘brave’, ‘like crying and they don’t’, and ‘angry’ while pain made girls feel ‘sad’, ‘embarrassed’, and ‘like running away’.36 There is even some research showing that infants as young as two months of age showed different facial expressions depending on the ethnic origins of their parents.37 American infants were schooled in self-assertive display-rules, while their Korean and Japanese counterparts had other-centred comportment drummed into them.38 That these gestures are not innate has been shown by the many studies of immigrant populations, tracing how (with increased 38 b i bl i og raphy Mintz, Susannah B., ‘On a Scale from to 10: Life Writing and Lyrical Pain’, Journal of Literary and Cultural Disability Studies, 5.3 (2011) Mitchell, Silas Weir, ‘The Birth and Death of Pain’, in Complete Poems of S Weir Mitchell, the American Verse Project, online http://quod.lib.umich.edu/cgi/t/ text/text-idx?c=amverse;idno=BAP5347.0001.001;rgn=div1;view=text;cc=am verse;node=BAP5347.0001.001%3A7 [viewed February 2012] Montgomery, Scott L., ‘Codes and Combat in Biomedical Discourse’, Science as Culture, 2.3 (1991) Montgomery, Scott L., ‘Illness and Image in Holistic Discourse: How Alternative is “Alternative”?’, Cultural Critique, 25 (Autumn 1993) Morris, David B., The Culture of Pain (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1991) Moscoso, Javier, Pain: A Cultural History (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2012) Niv, David, ‘The Chronic Pain Narrative and Quality of Life’, in Daniel B Carr, John D Loeser, and David B Morris (eds), Narrative, Pain, and Suffering (Seattle: IASP Press, 2005) Papper, Emanuel Martin, Romance Poetry and Surgical Sleep: Literature Influences ­Medicine (Westport: Greenwood Press, 1995) Pernick, Martin S., A Calculus of Suffering: Pain, Professionalism, and Anesthesia in Nineteenth Century America (New York: Columbia University Press, 1985) Porter, Roy and Rousseau, G S., Gout: The Patrician Malady (New Haven: Yale ­University Press, 1998) Priel, Beatrice, Rabinowitz, Betty, and Pels, Richard J., ‘A Semiotic Perspective on Chronic Pain: Implications for the Interaction between Patient and Physician’, British Journal of Medical Psychology, 64.1 (1991) Reiser, Stanley Joel, ‘Science, Pedagogy, and the Transformation of Empathy in Medicine’, in Howard M Spiro, Mary G McCrea Curmen, Enid Peschel, and Deborah St John (eds), Empathy and the Practice of Medicine: Beyond Pills and the Scalpel (New Haven:Yale University Press, 1993) Rey, Roselyne, The History of Pain, trans Louise Elliott Wallace (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1995) Reynolds, L A and Tansey, E M (eds), Innovation in Pain Management: The Transcript of a Witness Seminar Held by the Wellcome Trust Centre for the History of Medicine at UCL, London, on 12 December 2002, 21 (London: The Wellcome Trust, 2004) Robinson,Victor, Victory Over Pain: A History of Anesthesia (New York: Henry Schuman, 1946) Rublack, Ulinka, ‘Fluxes:The Early Modern Body and the Emotions’, trans Pamela Selwyn, History Workshop Journal, 53 (2002) Sandelowki, Margarete, Pain, Pleasure, and American Childbirth: From the Twilight Sleep to the Read Method, 1914–1960 (Westport: Greenwood Press, 1984) Scarry, Elaine, The Body in Pain: The Making and Unmaking of the World (New York: Oxford University Press, 1985) Scarry, Elaine, ‘Among Schoolchildren:The Use of Body Damage to Express Physical Pain’, in Sarah Coakley and Kay Kaufman Shelemay (eds), Pain and Its Transformations: The Interface of Biology and Culture (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 2007) b i bl i og raphy 383 Schott, G D., ‘Communicating the Experience of Pain: The Role of Analogy’, Pain, 108 (2004) Smith, Lisa Wynne, ‘An Account of an Unaccountable Distemper: The Experience of Pain in Early Eighteenth Century England and France’, Eighteenth-Century Studies, 41.4 (Summer 2008) Snow, Stephanie J., Operations Without Pain: The Practice and Science of Anaesthesia in Victorian Britain (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2006) Snow, Stephanie J., Blessed Days of Anaesthesia: How Anaesthetics Changed the World (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2009) Sontag, Susan, ‘Man With a Pain: A Story’, Harper’s Magazine (April 1964) Sontag, Susan, Illness as Metaphor and AIDS and its Metaphors (New York: Doubleday, 1990) Spiro, Harold, ‘Clinical Reflections on the Placebo Phenomenon’, in Anne Harrington (ed.), The Placebo Effect: An Interdisciplinary Exploration (1997) Stanley, Peter, For Fear of Pain: British Surgery, 1790–1850 (Amsterdam: Rodopi, 2003) Sullivan, Mark D., ‘Finding Pain Between Minds and Bodies’, The Clinical Journal of Pain, 17.2 (June 2001) Tilburt, Jon, ‘Enlightenment Values, Intraculture, and the Origins of Patient Mistrust’, The Pluralist, 1.2 (Summer 2006) Vrancken, Mariet A E., ‘Schools of Thought on Pain’, Social Science and Medicine, 29.3 (1989) Wear, Andrew, ‘Perceptions of Pain in Seventeenth Century England’, The Society for the Social History of Medicine Bulletin, 36 (1985) Weiner, Saul J and Auster, Simon, ‘From Empathy to Caring: Defining the Ideal Approach to a Healing Relationship’, Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine, 80 (2007) Whittier, Gayle, ‘The Ethics of Metaphor and the Infant Body in Pain’, Literature and Medicine, 18.2 (1999) Williams, Amanda C de C., Talfryn Oakley Davies, Huw, and Chadury, Yasmin, ­‘Simple Pain Rating Scales Hide Complex Idiosyncratic Meanings’, Pain, 85 (2000) Wolf, Jacqueline H., Deliver Me From Pain: Anesthesia and Birth in America (Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 2009) Woolf, Virginia, On Being Ill, intro by Hermione Lee, 1st pub 1930 (Ashfield, Mass.: Paris Press, 2002) Yu, Ning, ‘The Relationship Between Metaphor, Body, and Culture’, in Tom Ziemka, Jordan Ziatev, and Roselyn M Frank (eds), Body, Language, and Mind, vol. 2 (New York: Mouton de Gruyter, 2008) Index Drawings and pictures are given in italics Abercrombie, John  10 abortion 218–22 A Calculus of Suffering: Pain, Professionalism, and Anesthesia in NineteenthCentury America (Pernick)  275 acetaminophen 21 Acker, Caroline Jean  272, 281, 361 n. 4, 364 n. 50 Adams, John  264–5 Advice to a Mother on the Management of her Children (Chavasse)  215 ‘Age as a Factor’ (Canadian Medical Association Journal)  137 Agnew, David C.  83, 148–9, 323 n. 160 alcohol 24, 64, 66, 90, 272, 281, 285 Alcott, Louisa May  275 Améry, Jean  30 amputation: attitudes to pain of  278–9 description of  35 Jackson’s memory of  271 medication for post-operative pain 292 phantom limb pain  138, 153–4 surgeons to eager for  235 without anesthetic  275–6 anaesthetics: absence of  275–85 and acute pain sufferers  137 affect on coping with acute afflictions 199–200 a blow to spiritual good argument 124 defence of not giving  292, 296–7 for infants  218 introduction in 1846:  271–2 invention/proliferation of  22 meaning of  272–5 and sympathy  256–7 analgesics  124, 137, 199–200, 214, 296–8 An Essay on the Beneficent Distribution of the Sense of Pain (Rowell) 187 ‘Angel of Pain, The’  94–5 angina  138, 173 anti-narrative tools  154 antipyrine 200–1 ‘A Professional Planter’ (Collins)  194 Argyle, John Duke of  176 Aring, Charles  262 Aristotle 54 Arnold, David  17, 305 n. 41 Arnold, James  281–2 Arp, Bill  60–1 ‘Art of Medicine, The’ (Cutter)  260 Art of Suffering,The (Bertrand)  48, 197 aspirin  200–1, 272, 280 Atkins, Josiah  93–4 Atkinson, J H.  150 Auster, Simon  268, 361 n. 122 Australia 195–6 ‘Australie’ (poet)  23 autonomic nervous system (ANS) 164 back pain  56, 59, 157, 291 Baillie, E C C.  195 Bain, Alexander  252 Balance of Pain,The 49 Ballingall, Sir George  142 Barnes, Roger 122 Barzini, Luigi  85 Bavarians 197 Beddoes, Thomas  273 Beecher, Henry K.  16–17, 225–6, 229 38 i nde x ‘beetle in the box’ (Wittgenstein) 6–7, 54 Bell, Sir Charles  10, 95–6, 169, 170, 177 Bendelow, Gillian A.  29, 122, 308 n. 8, 328 n. 84 Bending, Lucy  17, 28, 128, 199, 308 n. 5 Bennett, Francis  45 Bennett, Sir William  201 Bergman, Norman A.  272, 274, 361 n. 4, 362 n. 13 Berkowitz, Dr Richard 220–1 Bertrand, Louis  48–9, 197 Betts, Rachael  21, 39, 108 Billard, Charles-Michel  215 Biro, David  25, 307 n. 66 Birth Trauma Association  24 Biss, Eula  156 Blumgart, Hermann  263 Blundell, Walter  257, 279 Body in Pain,The (Scarry)  4, 30 Boerhaave, Herman  242 Bonica, John  291 Bottalico, Barbara  9, 303 n. 16 brain: activity in the anterior cingulate  267 activity in a foetus  221–2 affective centres of  15 centres and bodily/emotional pain  21 in infants  216 mirror neurons in  18 and neuro-imaging  157 pain as response to stimuli  10 and racial sciences  196 breast cancer  38, 44, 132, 135 Brief Account of Charles Dunsdon (Tract Association of Society of Friends) 109–10 Bright, Richard 10 Brock, Revd Thomas  98–9 ‘Brompton Cocktail’  289 bronze bull, made for Phalaris  80 Brookes, Frederick  100–1 Brookes, George  100–1 Brown, John  100, 104, 274 Brown, Theodore M.  260, 359 n. 97 Bruce, Revd John  104–5 Brunless, Annie Mary  207 Buchanan, Joseph  247 Buchanan, William  98 Bullar, Joseph  286–7 Bunbury, Henry William  66 Burke, Edmund  15, 18, 164, 170 Burney, Fanny  34–5, 38–9 Burns, Robert 33 Butler, Glentworth Reeve 140–1, 158, 203 Cambodia 152 Campanella, Tommaso  15 Camparesi, Silvia  9, 303 n. 16 Camper, Petrus  210 Canada 195–6 cancer: breast  38, 44, 132, 135 cauterization 281 and chronic pain  16 half of suffering unnecessary  291–2 hiding pain  39 isolation fear by admitting suffering 43 metaphors for pain  62, 64, 75, 77, 84 metastatic ovarian  27 and morphia  286 pain as normal  299 pain rating scales  156 pain relief for metastatic prostate  293 in poorer households  38 sufferers in the 1950s  21 in the tongue  138 uterus 277 Cardiac Pain (Fisher)  144–5 Carey, Revd Henry  98–9 Carlyle, Jane  37 Carmichael, Jennings  127 Carr, Daniel B.  293, 295, 297, 369 n. 101, 370 n. 115, 372 n. 135 Chain of Feeling  96, 196, 223, 230, 272 charity hospitals  136 Charon, Rita  269, 361 nn. 123/6 Chavasse, Pye Henry  215 Cheering Views of Man and Providence (Burton)  82, 97 Cheever, David  257 Cheyne, George  72 childbirth: and abortion  219–20 and anaesthetics  271 endurance through pride  16 husbands experiencing discomforts of 51 i nde x 38 as the ‘natural’ consequence of Original Sin  284 pangs of labour in another woman 250 and sentience  208–13 woman in the 1940s  123 children: anaesthetics for infants  218 brains of infants  216 and Christianity  115, 117, 118 difficulties in assessing pain in  275, 292–3 and gesture  181–6 need for ‘small talk’ when examining 176 in pain  112–18 pain gesture in infants  181–6 pain sentience in infants  214–18 provision of extra-dural anaesthesia 294 rich pain-languages  153 sensitivities of male schoolchildren in Michigan 198 teething infants  278 ‘Child’s Companion, The’  117 Chinese  152, 293 chloroform  256–7, 271, 275–8, 280, 282–4, 287; see also anaesthetics Christianity: and analgesics for people dying  286–7 and an ‘inalienable right’ to face death consciously 288 belief in a ‘life of pain’  82–3 comportment when in pain  105–9 and endurance of flames in this world 104–5 pain in children  115, 117, 118 pain as the consequence of sin  93–5 pain as spiritual guidance  95–100 pertinence of religious interpretations of pain  123 and the suffering community  49–50 suffering as mechanism for spiritual renewal 109–12 survivors and excruciating deaths 101–2 see also religion Christian Lady’s Magazine,The 115 circumcision 217–18 Clapp, Theodore  38, 46–7 Clark, Sir Andrew  132 Clark, William Fairlie  278 Clarke, Elizabeth  106–7 Clarke, Joseph  106 ‘Clinical Notes on Some Common Ailments’ (Knyvett Gordon)  208 ‘Clinical Significance of Pain, The’ (British Medical Journal)  138 Coakley, Sarah  13, 91, 304 n. 28, 324 n. 3 Cohen, Esther  17, 305 n. 41 Coleridge, Samuel Taylor  273 ‘Comparative Psychology of Man’ (Spencer) 252 computerized tomography (CT)  255 Cooper, Bransby B.  135, 140 Cooper, C M.  172–3 Cooper, Richard Tennant  280 Cope, Sir Zachary  296 Copeman, W S C.  145–6 Coulson, William  85–6 couvade  18, 51 Cowper, William  30–1, 37–8, 46, 206–7 Crawford, Cassandra  153 Crawford, James  242 ‘creative computation’  154 Creator, the  19, 92, 96–7 Critchley, MacDonald  262 Crozier, Ivan  209, 348 n. 64 Cruikshank, George  64, 64, 82 ‘Crying, Weeping, and Sighing’ (SouthWestern Monthly) 162–3 ‘Cry of Pain, The’ (The Lancet) 163 Csordas, Thomas J.  17, 305 n. 41 Curmen, Mary G.  255, 358 n. 78 Dale, Doctor William  281 Darwin, Charles  164, 185, 188–9 Daughter of Affliction,The (Rankin) 285 Davies, Elizabeth  128–9 Davy, Humphry  273–4, 274 deathbed declarations  179 death pangs  285–90 de la Flechere, Revd John William  106 dentistry  198, 200, 203, 257, 278 Derbyshire, Stuart  221–2 Dervishers 195 Descartes, René  10, 12–13, 14, 25, 241–2 ‘Detecting Deception in Pain Expressions’ (Hill/Craig)  177–8 Devotions on Emergent Occasions (Donne)  74 388 i nde x Diagnosis of Internal Medicine,The (Butler) 140 diagnostic classification systems  137 Diagnostics of Internal Medicine,The (Butler) 196–7 ‘Diagnostic Value of Pain, The’ (Alvin) 133 ‘Dialogue Between Mother and Daughter’ 115–16 diarrhoea  23, 142 Dickson, Samuel  286 Differential Diagnosis (Cabot)  139 Diffusion Tensor Imaging (DTI)  157 Dijkhuizen, Jans Frans von  92, 324 n. 7 ‘Disappearance of the Patients, The’ (Fissell) 136 Dissertation on the Duty of Mercy and Sin of Cruelty to Brute Animals, A (Primatt) 188 Doctor in War,The (Hutchinson)  224 dogs  18, 81 Donne, John  74 Dormandy, Thomas  22, 272, 306 n. 56, 361 n. 4 Douglas, Guy  7, 15 Downman, Hugh  183–4, 214 Draper, Elizabeth  42 Duden, Barbara  17, 305 n. 41 dyspepsia 63 Eadie, Mervyn J.  272, 361 n. 4 Edinburgh Philosophical Society  244 Edmonds, Emma  36–7, 237 Edson, Margaret  27, 52 Eisenberger, Naomi  21 Ekman, Paul  18, 164 electrocardiograms 173–4 electroconvulsive therapy (ECT)  227 Eliphalet, Charles  96–7 embryology 219 empathy  263–4, 267 E.M.P (medical student)  192–3, 196, 230 Encyclopaedia Britannica 243 Enenkel, Karl A E.  92, 324 n. 7 Engel, George  57, 141–3 Erichsen, John Eric  224 Essay on the Beneficent Distribution of the Sense of Pain (Rowell) 96 Essay on Humanity, An (Nolan)  95, 235 Essays on the Anatomy and Philosophy of Expression (Bell)  96 Essays on Physiognomy (Lavater)  170 ether  5, 271–3, 275–6; see also anaesthetics ‘Ether Day address’  102 Evans, William  173–4 Evidences of Natural and Revealed Theology (Lord) 96–7 ‘Experimental Pharmacology and Measurement of the Subjective Response’ (Beecher)  229 Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals,The (Darwin)  164, 188 Fabrega, Horacio  152 Facial Action Coding System (FACS)  177, 186 facial coding techniques  177 facial expressions  164–5, 177–8, 188–9 Fellman, Anita Clair  279, 346 n. 42 Fellman, Michael  279, 346 n. 42 ‘Field Hospital’ (Wistrand)  161–2 Fields, Howard L.  13–14, 304 n. 28 Finney, John M T.  102, 135, 142, 205–6 Finnish speakers  152 Fissell, Mary  136, 331 n. 18 Flechsig, Paul Emil  215–16 Flood, Peter  287–8 fMRI technologies  267 For Future Doctors (Gregg)  265 Forth, Christopher E.  209, 348 n. 64 Fox, Renée C.  263, 359 n. 103 Freeman, Walter  227 Frémont, General John Charles  276 From Detached Concern to Empathy (Halpern)  262, 268 Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) 157 ‘Function of Physical Pain: Anaesthetics’ 124 gall bladder disease  138 Galt, Geoffrey  4–5 Galton, Francis  208–9 Gate Control Theory  229 gender  19, 84 Gervis, Henry  44 Gibbs, Raymond 54 i nde x 38 Girdlestone, Edward  187, 222–3 Glasgow Cancer Hospital  38, 43 Glucklich, Ariel  57–8 Goldberg, Daniel S.  299–300, 373 n. 146 Golinski, Jan  274, 362 n. 13 gout 64–5, 66, 72, 82 ‘Gout A Sonnet’  65 G P (Rainow)  57, 275 Gray, John  126–7 Gray, Thomas  72, 80 Great Ormond Street Hospital, see ­London’s Hospital for Sick Children Gregory, John  249, 251, 254 Gross, Samuel David  134, 171 Grubb, Sarah  115 Gurney, Rachel 103–4 Hall, Marshall  184–5 Halpern, Jodi  262, 265, 268, 359–60 n. 109 Hamilton, Frank  275 Hand: Its Mechanism and Vital Endowments as Evincing Design (Bell)  95–6 Haraway, Donna  70, 319 n. 93 Harper, Elizabeth  81 Harrison, Mark  17, 305 n. 41 Harrison Narcotic Act 1914 (US)  281 Hay, Anna  31 Haymaker, Webb  197 headaches  1, 33, 68, 80, 98–9, 138, 148, 152, 205 Head, Henry  216 Heads and Faces and How to Study Them (Sizer/Drayton) 237 hearsay evidence  179–81 Hering, Constantine  134 Herrade of Landsberg  93 Hervey, John  71–2 Hicks, James  40 Hilbert, Richard A.  132, 330 n. 5 Hilliard, Harvey  282–3 Hinton, James  91, 102 Hints on the Sources of Happiness, Addressed to Her Children  48, 113–14 Hip disease  138 Hispanics 293 Holifield, E Brooks  112 holistic medicine  260 Holland, Sir Henry  144, 236 Hooker, Worthington  248–9 Horemans, Johan Joseph  234 Horne, John  20–1 Howell, Joel D.  256, 358 n. 80 ‘How to Endure Pain’  280 Hoyle, Clifford  289 Hume, David  240, 251 humoral theory  71, 201 Hunter, William  268 iatroculture 264 Illness as Metaphor (Sontag)  55 India 152 infants, see children Infant Stress Under Intensive Care (Gottfried/Gaiter) 294 inflammation  114, 134–5 ‘Inflammation’ (Simon)  134–5 Infrared Imaging Thermography  156 Inquiries into Human Faculty and its Development (Galton)  209 Insurance Law Journal 180 International Association for the Study of Pain (IASP)  10–12, 291 ‘International Frontiers of Pain’ (Haymaker) 197 International Headache Society  291 Intractable Pain Society  290 ‘Invention of Hospital Medicine’ (Fissell) 136 in vitro fertilization  219 in vivo proton magnetic-resonance spectrometry 157 Irishmen 197 Islam 122–3 ‘Is There Such a Thing as Psychological Pain?’ Biro  25 ‘Is There Such a Thing as Pure Malevolence?’ (Bain)  252 Italians,The (Barzini)  85 Jackson, Jean  17, 42, 305 n. 41, 312 n. 69 Jackson, Seguin Henry  34, 242–4, 251 Jackson, Thomas  270–1, 299–300 Jackson, Thomas J ‘Stonewall’  284–5 Jacob, Margaret C.  273–4, 362 n. 11 James, Alice  38, 44, 131–2, 157 James, William  164 Jews  196–9, 228 39 i nde x Kimmel, Michael  20 King, Margaret  30 Kinsella,Victor John  187 Kleinman, Arthur  17, 305 n. 41 ‘Knackers, Pork-Sausages, and Virtue’ (The Penny Satirist) 188 Kremer, Edwin  150 Latham, Dr Peter Mere: acknowledged that ‘pain kills’  37 comments on pain  301 dismissive of patient ‘tales’  158 early advocate of auscultation  137 and the expression of the countenance 191 introduction 1–5, life writing about fever  12 and opium  277 pain as an entity  8–9 pain and the mind  21 pain not a symptom  131 the pain of others  23 personal character influences painnarratives 140 and ‘victims of extreme intemperance’ 199 Lavater, Johann Kaspar  170 Lawrence, Christopher  136, 244, 250–1, 260, 331 n. 18, 356 n. 42, 357 n. 60, 359 n. 96 Lectures on the Duties and Qualifications of a Physician (Gregory)  249, 254 Lectures on Man (Vogt)  194 Lectures on Sympathy (Lamont)  249 Leif, Harold I.  263, 359 n. 103 Leriche, René: exploration of surgical pain  224–5 pain as a continuous phenomenon 228–9 and pain diagnosis  144 pain ‘like a storm’  231, 267, 301 reducing pain and shock  200–1 and sympathy  261–2 and trigeminal neuralgia consultation 167–8 Lewins, Anne  117 Lewis, Sir Thomas  144 Leys, Ruth  38, 310 n. 45 Liley, A William  218–19 Lincoln, Abraham  194 L’Isere, Colombat de  166 Liston, Sir Robert 232 lobotomies  15, 227 Loeser, John D.  291, 293, 295, 297, 369 n. 101, 370 n. 115, 372 n. 135 London Ambulance Column  37 London Encyclopaedia,The 165 London Hospital Gazette,The  141, 193 London’s Hospital for Sick Children  114 Lord, Charles Eliphalet  96–7 Love, David  44 LSD 227 McGill Pain Questionnaire  134, 147–8, 149, 150–4, 158 McGraw, Myrtle  216–17 McTavish, Jan R. 75, 272, 321 n.119, 361n.4 Magendie, Franỗois 10 magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) 255 malingering  141, 177, 180 Mandeville, Bernard  133–4, 136 Mann, Ronald D.  22, 306 n. 56 Mantegazza, Paolo  164 Maoris 196 Marie de L’Incarnation, Reverend Mother 111–12 Marland, Hilary  24, 307 n. 62 Martineau, Harriet  28, 34–5, 51, 99, 114–15, 123–4, 277 Martin, Revd George  99 Massachusetts General Hospital  114 Maudsley, Henry  58 Maxwell, Lady  98 Mayhew, Jenny  92, 324 n. 7 Mechanism of Abdominal Pain,The (Kinsella) 187 Medicaid 294 Medical Notes and Reflections (Holland)  138, 236 ‘Meditations on First Philosophy’ (Descartes) 241 Meigs, John Forsyth  183 Meldrum, Marcia L.  272, 281, 299, 361 n. 4, 364 n. 50, 372 n. 143 Melvill, Henry  120–1 Melzack, Ronald  18, 147–8, 150, 152, 229, 305 n. 43 Memoir of the Last Illness and Death of Rachel Betts 107 i nde x 391 Memoir of Thomas Hamitah Patoo (New York Religious Tract Society)  108 Mengert, William E.  212 Mental Deficiency (Tredgold)  204 Mersky, Harold  83, 148–9, 323 n. 160 metaphors: commonplace usage for pain  58–66 decline in usage  80–7 description of  53–4 diversity 66–79 and figurative languages  54–8 migraine  8, 24, 65 Miller, James  256–7, 282 Mills, Pauline  295–6 mind-body dualism  87 mirror neurons  38 miscegenation 210 Mitchell, Silas Weir  23, 32, 125, 199, 232, 281, 299 Modern Surgical Technique (Thorek)  276 Montgomery, Scott  77 Montgomery, S L.  74, 321 n. 110 Moodie, Suzanna  63 Moore, James  248 ‘Morning Prayer, The’ (Epp)  116 morphine  272, 276, 286, 289, 292, 296, 298; see also anaesthetics Morris, David B.  12, 293, 295, 297, 304 n. 24, 369 n. 101, 370 n. 115, 372 n. 135 Moscoso, Javier  17, 304 n. 22 Mother’s Medical Pocket Book,The 278 Mott,Valentine  77–8, 125, 257 Mouse Grimace Scale (MGS)  189–90 Müller, Johannes  10 music of pain  166–7, 166 Musmanno, Justice Michael  178–9 Musser, John H.  140–1, 167 Mystery of Pain,The (Hinton)  91 myths 121–3 Nathanson, Dr Bernard  219–21, 220 Natural Theology (Paley)  48 Neal, Helen  292, 367 n. 89 Negroes  194–5, 210–14, 252 nervous system, sympathetic  18 Neuralgia 59 neuralgia: agony of  77–8 conjecture as to origin of pain  138 ‘Cured by a New Process’  245–6 a ‘demon’ that could be driven away 82 a form of ‘excruciating agony’  79 ‘sharp and lancinating’  134 speaking in distinctive gestures  165–6 trigeminal  31, 75 neuro-imaging 157 Newman, John Henry  91 New Problems in Medical Ethics (Flood) 287–8 New York Religious Tract Society  108 New Zealand  196 Nichols, L A.  174–5 Nietzsche, Friedrich  9, 61 nitrous oxide  274, 283; see also anaesthetics Nolan, William  95, 235 Nurses Manual (Australia)  294 nursing 171–2 ‘Of Voluntary Suffering’ (Harper’s Weekly) 110 ‘olioanalgesia’  291, 295 On the Diseases of the Bladder and Prostate Gland (Coulson)  85–6 opium  272, 277, 287; see also anaesthetics Ord, John Walker  243–4 ‘Organ of Courage’  202–3 ‘Organ of Destructiveness’  201–2, 202, 236–7 ‘Organ of Fighting’  201–2 ‘Origin of the Gout’ (Bunbury)  66 Osler, Sir William  122, 258, 259, 260 Outlines of Lectures on the Neurological System of Anthropology (Buchanan) 247 Outlines of Military Surgery (Ballingall) 142 ovarian cancer  27 Oxycontin 297 Packham, Catherine  244, 251, 356 n. 42 pain: as an event  5–7, 16, 18–19, 25 on the battlefield  222–5 beyond words  27–8 and the body  19–22 and children  112–18 chronic 266 392 i nde x pain: (cont.) as a complex phenomenon  12–17 and culture  17–19 definitions of  1–5, 9–12 demands of  28–34 diagnosis of  131–3 as a divine purpose  91–4 ‘Facial Expression of Sympathy’  47 Gate Control Theory of  10–11 importance of  22–6 instructions on suffering  105–12 in-utera/in-vitro 219 Joseph Townend’s experiences  88–90 mechanistic model of  13, 14 as mode of perception  7–8 as nature’s sentinel  83 physical 25 pious struggles  118–21 and salvation  102–5 and secularism  123–30 as a separate entity  61 silent suffering  114 and sin  93–4 as spiritual guidance  95–100 and spiritual rebirth  100–2 sympathetic communities  46–52 sympathy, see sympathy Pain: A Cultural History (Moscoso)  17, 304 n. 22 pain-dog (Nietzsche)  9, 13 pain gesture: in animals  186–91, 219 diagnosis 165–8 doubting 175–8 in infants  181–6 introduction 159–61 learning 168–75 legal issues  178–81 suffering in the clinic  161–5 pain language: eradication 154–8 revival 147–54 ‘Pain Language as a Measure of Affect in Chronic Pain Patients’ (Kremer/ Atkinson) 150 Painless Tooth-Extraction Without Chloroform (Blundell)  257 pain metaphors: diversity 73–9 dogs 81 electrical 79 evidence of suffering  178 flickering 81 gender 64–5 of Joseph Townend  161 mechanical 79 militarist 74–7 myths 121–3 railway 77–8 religious 81 of Robert Wistrand  161–2 rupture 62–5 temperature change  65–6, 66 torture 80 usage 83–6 usage generally  53–4, 87–8 using humoral theory  71–2 weight 65 pain narratives: dangers of  39–46 description using figurative languages 54–8 diagnostic value  133–5 distress of  34–9 not dismissed  256 problems 135–47 pain questionnaires  134, 147–8, 149, 150–4, 158 pain rating scales  154–6, 155 pain relief: and anaesthetics, see anaesthetics anxieties 275–85 death pangs  285–90 introduction 270–2 modern 290–302 ‘Pain Relief in the Pediatric Patient’ (Swafford/Allan) 292 ‘Pain Scale, The’ (Biss)  156 pain sentience: and foetuses  218–22 and infants  214–18 innate 201–3 introduction 192–3 mental factors  222–30 not-fully-human peoples  193–9 social 203–6, 204 and women  205, 206–14 ‘pain smile’  177 Pain and Sympathy (McCormick)  196 Pain (Wolff/Wolf )  147 i nde x 393 Pain (Zolinsky)  59–60 Paley, William  48 Pancuronium 292 Papper, Emanuel Martin  273, 362 n. 10 Paradoxical Reflex (Head)  216 Passages from the Diary (Warren)  57 Path of Improvement in Cancer Treatment, The (Snow)  285–6 Pati, Biswamoy  17, 305 n. 41 Pavlov, Ivan  15 Peabody, Francis  238, 260–2 Pels, Richard J.  122, 328 n. 84 pelvic angle  210 Pendleton, Jill  291 Pernick, Martin S.  22, 194, 275, 306 n. 56, 344 n. 4, 362 n. 16 Perry’s Treatise on the Prevention and Cure of the Tooth-Ache  215, 232 personality types  71 Peschel, Enid.  255, 358 n. 78 Philoctetes (Sophocles)  27 Philosophical Investigations (Wittgenstein) 5–6 Philosophy of the Active and Moral Powers of Man,The (Stewart)  36, 246 phrenology  165, 201–3, 236–7 physiognomy 170–1, 171, 174, 188, 203 Poetics,The (Aristotle)  54 Positron Emission Tomography (PET) 157 Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) 24 Pott’s disease  138 Practical Treatise on the Diseases of Children, A (Meigs)  183 Practical Treatise of Medical Diagnosis for Students and Physicians, A (Musser)  140–1, 167 Priel, Beatrice  122, 328 n. 84 Primatt, Humphrey  188 p.r.n (pro re nata) 172 ‘Properties of Cultural Embodiment’ (Kimmel) 20 prostate cancer  293 Protestants 228 Proverbs (3:11-12)  94 Prussians 197 psychogenic suffering  142 ‘Psychology of the Surgical Patient, The’ (British Medical Journal)  139 Psychosurgery: In the Treatment of Mental Disorders and Intractable Pain (Freeman/Watts) 227 puerperal mania  24 Pugh, Judy F.  17, 305 n. 41 Pulvermacher machine  79 Rabinowitz, Betty  122, 328 n. 84 race  110–11, 196, 210 Rai, Amit  268–9 railway metaphors  77–8 Rainow, G K.  275–6 Raja, Anand  221–2 Ralston, Aron Lee  276 Rankin, Mary  35, 285–6 Reagan, Ronald 219 Rees, George  81 Reeve, Glentworth  140 Reiser, Stanley Joel  255, 358 n. 78 ‘Relief of Pain in Childhood, The’ (Henderson) 217 religion: chloroform as a decoy of Satan  283–4 decline in pain metaphorical usage 81–3 Joseph Townend’s experiences  88–90 pain and children  112–18 pain as a divine purpose  91–5 pain and salvation  102–5 and pain as spiritual guidance  95–100 pain and spiritual rebirth  100–2 pious struggles with pain  118–21, 125–30 scientists/physicians views on pain 121 religious metaphors  81 Religious Tract Society  98 Remarks on the Sympathetic Connection Existing Between the Body and Mind (Ord)  223–4, 243–4 Representation of Bodily Pain in Late Nineteenth-Century English Culture (Bending)  17, 199 retrojection  20–1, 92 Reynolds, L A.  272, 361 n. 4 Rey, Roselyne  22, 216, 306 n. 56, 349 n. 87 rheumatism  64, 79 Ricoeur, Paul  Robinson,Victor  22, 306 n. 56 394 i nde x Rodent Face Finder  190 Roesly, Mary  40 Roe v.Wade 219 Romaine, William  103 Rothwell, Richard 48 Rowell, George Augustus  96, 187 Rowe, Thomas Smith  257 Rowlandson, Thomas  233, 274 Royal Society of Medicine and Surgery 49 Rublack, Ulinka  71 Rule of Sympathy (Rai) 268–9 Rundell, Maria Eliza  284 Rush, Benjamin  254–5 Russell, W H.  179 Rutherford, John  133, 140 Rutkow, Ira M.  276, 362 n. 21 ‘Sacred Pain and the Phenomenal Self ’ (Glucklich) 57 St John, Deborah  255, 358 n. 78 salicylate (willow bark)  272 Sandelowki, Margarete  22, 306 n. 56 Sandrin, Dilma  218 Saunders, Cicely  290 Sauter, Michael J.  273–4, 373n.11 Scarry, Elaine  4–5, 30, 55 Schiebinger, Londa  210, 348 n. 66 Schott, G D.  66, 319 n. 79 Science of Ethics,The (Stephen)  245, 252 ‘Science, Pedagogy, and the Transformation of Empathy in Medicine’ (Reiser) 255 ‘Screaming Yellow Zonkers’  59, 59 secularism 123–30 ‘Self-Indulgent Man Afflicted with Gout’ (Cruikshank)  82 ‘Sensibility to Pain’ (Swift)  203 ‘sentient principle’ (Whytt)  242 Shapcott, Jo  56, 314 n. 8 Shelemay, Kay Kaufman  13, 304 n. 28 Shelley, Percy Bysshe  273 Sidgwick, Henry  45, 247 Sieveking, Edward Henry  207–9 Significance and Effect of Pain,The (Finney)  135, 205–6 ‘Significance of Pain, The’ (Thomson) 167 Silent Scream,The (film 1984)  219 Simpson, James Young  210, 284 Sinhalese speakers  152 Sketches of Life and Character in the Children’s Hospital Melbourne (Carmichael) 127 Skott, Carola  84 slavery  194, 230 Smith, Adam  35–7, 234, 240–1, 246–7, 251 Smith, E B.  274, 362 n. 13 Smith, Thomas  80, 80–1 Smyth, Thomas  20, 60–1, 118–19 Snow, Herbert  285–6 Snow, Stephanie J.  272, 274–5, 361 n. 4, 362 n. 14 Society for the Protection of the Unborn Child  218 Somerville, Alexander  175 Sontag, Susan  55–6 Sophia, Princess  175 Southey, Robert 273 Spain 197 ‘spatiotemporal patterns of the sensation’ 58 Spencer, Herbert  252 spinal cord  10 gating mechanism in  10–11, 11, 13 Spiro, Harold  10, 304 n. 23 Spiro, Howard M.  255, 358 n. 78 Spurzheim, Johann Gaspar  236 Stanhope, Philip Dormer (4th Earl of Chesterfield) 42 Stanley, Peter  272, 361 n. 4 Stanton, Elizabeth Cady  209–10 Stephen, Leslie  245, 252 Sterne, Laurence  42–3 stethoscopes 137 Stewart, Dugald  36, 246 stomach irritation  138 Stone, Revd Andrew  245 Strauss, Edgar  180–1 Suicide Disease, see trigeminal neuralgia Sullivan, Mark D.  8, 303 n. 13 Surgery of Pain,The (Leriche)  167–8, 231, 261 Surgical Experience of Chloroform (Miller) 256 suxamethonium 292 Swerdlow, Mark  290 Swift, Jonathan  33, 80 Sydenham, Thomas  255 i nde x 395 sympathy: case for  248–52 correct manner  253–8, 259, 260–5 development of  240–4 introduction 231–4 of medical practitioners  235–40 modern problems  265–9 unravelling of  244–7 Sympathy; or the Mourner Advised and Consoled (Bruce)  104 syphilis 185–6 System of Clinical Medicine, A (Savill)  139 System of Surgery: Pathological, Diagnostic, Therapeutic, and Operative (Gross) 134 Tabe dorsalis  75 ‘Taking the Narrative Out of Pain’ (Tracey) 157 Tamagawa, Kathleen  213–14 Tansey, E M.  272, 361n.4 Tasistro, Louis Fitzgerald  33 teething 215; see also dentistry temperature change metaphors  65–6, 66 Tesson, Eugene  288 Textbook of the Rheumatic Diseases (Copeman) 145–6 Thai speakers  152 ‘The Assessment of Post-Vasectomy Pain in Mice’ (Leach and ors)  189 ‘The Head-Ache, Or an Ode to Health’ (Winscom) 232–3 ‘The Nervous System and Society in the Scottish Enlightenment’ (Lawrence) 250 Theory of Moral Sentiments,The 240–1 Thomson, W H.  167 Tighe, Dr Mary  219 Tilburt, Jon  257, 264, 358 n. 88, 359 n. 106 Tisdall, Claire  50–1 toothache  113, 115–17, 125; see also dentistry Torgerson, Warren  147–8, 152 torture  30, 80 ‘total pain’ concept  290 Townend, Joseph  88–90, 101, 110, 129, 161–2 Townsend, Revd John  108 Tracey, Irene  157 ‘Training for “Detached Concern” in Medical Students’ (Leif/Fox)  263 Traité de l’homme (Descartes)  241–2 Treatise on the Diseases of Children, A (Hall) 184 Treatise on the Diseases of Children (Underwood) 182 Treatise on the Diseases of Infants, A (Billard) 215 Treatise of Human Nature, A (Hume)  240, 251 Treatise of the Hypochondriack and Hysterick Diseases (Mandeville)  133–4 Treatise on Sympathy in Two Parts, A ( Jackson)  34, 242–3, 251 Treatise Upon the Diseases and Hygiene of the Organs of the Voice (L’Iserer)  166 Tredgold, Alfred Frank  204 trigeminal neuralgia  31, 75 Turner, Thomas  236 Two Introductory Lectures (Hunter)  268 Tyma, Stephen  152 Underwood, Michael  182, 214–15 Unwin, Mary  37, 46 Vaughan, Kathleen  211 venereal disease  42–3 Vietnam 297 Visual Analog Scales  154 vivisection  187–8, 237, 239 ‘Vivisector, The’  237–8 Vogt, Karl Christoph  194 voluntary hospitals  136 Vrancken, Mariet A E.  29, 308 n. 8 Wall, Patrick  229 Walpole, Horace  72 Warnock Committee report (1984) 219 Warnock, Fay  218 Waterhouse, Sir Herbert  249 Watts, James W.  227 Wear, Andrew  17, 305 n. 41 Webb, Sarah  210–11 weight metaphors  65 Weiner, Saul  268, 361 n. 122 Wesley, Charles  117 West, Paul  239 39 ‘What has Anaesthetics Done for Surgery?’ (Cheever)  257 ‘What is an Emotion?’ ( James)  164 Whittier, Gayle  292, 367 n. 91 ‘Why is Pain a Mystery?’ (Yeo)  244–5 Whytt, Robert 242–3 Williams, John Whitridge  212 Williams, Simon J.  29, 308 n. 8 Williams, Sir John  250 Wilson, James  291 Winscom, Jane  33, 232–3 Wistrand, Robert 161–2 Wit (Edson)  27, 52 WITSENDO (online discussion group) 51–2 Wittgenstein, Ludwig  5–7, 17, 54, 73 Wolcott’s Instant Pain Annihilator  76 Wolff, Harold  226 Wolf, Stewart  226 i nde x ‘Woman Suffering the Pain of Cholic’ (Cruikshank)  64 Woolf,Virginia  28–9, 53–4, 302 ‘Words of Chronic Pain’ (Agnew/ Merskey)  83, 148 World Health Organization  281 Wynne Smith, Lisa  17, 305 n. 41 Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine (Weiner/Auster) 268 Yeo, Isaac Burney  127 Yorke, Susan Liddell  175 Young, Edward  33, 72, 100, 126, 264 Zaimi, Nexhmie  41 Zamboni, Giovanni  9, 303 n. 16 Zborowski, Mark  85, 228 Zola, Irving Kenneth  85 Zolinsky, Henry Saul  59–60 ... blood, and the veins of the temple and forehead distended; the breath being checked, and the descent of blood from the head impeded by the agony of the chest, the cutaneous muscles of the neck... by the base octave and the seventeenth; for example, the and re, upon the sharp of the second register It seems that the atrocious pangs of labor elevate the diapason of the voice, and at the. .. Diagnosis The third argument about the value of gestural languages asked whether they were diagnostically constructive This is the other side of the debates in the last chapter about the diagnostic

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