What a nerve
2012; BMJ; Volume: 344; Issue: mar14 2 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1136/bmj.e2036
ISSN0959-8138
Autores Tópico(s)History of Medical Practice
ResumoMany plays have a doctor as a character, but few have five (of a total cast of 10). Jupiter Laughs is one such play, and, not surprisingly, perhaps, it is by a doctor: A J Cronin (1896-1981). Cronin, whom the Dictionary of National Biography describes as “a middlebrow writer par excellence ,”—and who, like Anthony Trollope, tried to write 5000 words a day, rain or shine—wrote it in 1941. The action takes place in a private clinic for “nerves” called Hopewell Towers—the tradition of giving cheery names to places for desperate cases lives on). The clinic is owned and directed by Dr Bragg, an immaculately dressed, pompous careerist. Among his staff is an ambitious and non-conformist young …
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