Issue 95: Symptoms

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Jul 17, 2020, 4:05:08 PM7/17/20
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ISSUE 95 | JUL 2020

SYMPTOMS


Friern hospital patients, photos 1890-1910

The EditorsErica X Eisen

Introduction

The editors explain themselves.

Nastya Panichkina

Are You There, Follicle?

When I turned 22, a good friend of mine—also experiencing anxiety over all sorts of things, including intercourse—told me about the so-called sympto-thermal method (or STM) for evaluating fertility throughout the menstrual cycle. In other words, for contraception.

Katy Burnett

The Next Spring Like This Will Be in a Hundred Years

By April 30, 1945, Nazi Germany has all but officially surrendered. The Reich has abandoned its citizens, throwing a contemptuous backward glance before collapsing entirely. Kluge tells the story through a series of fictional vignettes, anecdotes, interviews, and other ephemera.

Sandow Sinai

Material Mindfulness

The tic brings me outside myself–far from being a mere signifier of diagnosis, it explodes into a vast network of phenomena that, rather than being components of my individual psyche, span almost every aspect of my social being.

Sergei SokolovskyAinsley Morse

Expressions of Grief on Social Networks

Wounds of the soul are akin to wounds of the flesh in more than just a metaphorical sense. They heal over slowly, painfully, with a great deal of pus.

Marybeth Ruether-Wu

Sores of the Realm

In the Middle Ages corruption usually meant something less abstract: the deterioration of physical matter, particularly bodies.

Tamara Fernando

Death at the Pearl Fishery

At the British-run pearl fisheries of India and Ceylon, policing divers’ bodies was key to ensuring that a recalcitrant and dangerously mobile labor force was anchored in place. But the body acquired a new salience—as both a threat and a potential site of resistance–in the form of illness and epidemic disease.

Alexander Wells

Perpetual Motion Machine

An ME/CFS sufferer charts the history and sociology of fatigue, with an eye to its redemptive possibilities.

Hannah Blair

A Slideshow of the Interior

The first person to tell me about the power of the positive attitude has been holding compression on a bleeding hole in my breast for more than an hour.

Olivia Durif

Emergencies

It’s normal, in the ER, to make jokes about your patient’s death. It isn’t normal to make jokes about your own. At least, it wasn’t before.

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