Pain Studies
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- $16.99
Publisher Description
“A fascinating, totally seductive read!” —Eula Biss, author of Notes from No Man’s Land: American Essays and On Immunity: An Inoculation
“A book built of brain and nerve and blood and heart. . . . Irreverent and astute. . . . Pain Studies will change how you think about living with a body.” —Elizabeth McCracken, author of Thunderstruck and Bowlaway
“A thrilling investigation into pain, language, and Olstein’s own exile from what Woolf called ‘the army of the upright.’ On a search path through art, science, poetry, and prime-time television, Olstein aims her knife-bright compassion at the very thing we’re all running from. Pain Studies is a masterpiece.” —Leni Zumas, author of The Listeners and Red Clocks
In this extended lyric essay, a poet mines her lifelong experience with migraine to deliver a marvelously idiosyncratic cultural history of pain—how we experience, express, treat, and mistreat it. Her sources range from the trial of Joan of Arc to the essays of Virginia Woolf and Elaine Scarry to Hugh Laurie’s portrayal of Gregory House on House M.D. As she engages with science, philosophy, visual art, rock lyrics, and field notes from her own medical adventures (both mainstream and alternative), she finds a way to express the often-indescribable experience of living with pain. Eschewing simple epiphanies, Olstein instead gives us a new language to contemplate and empathize with a fundamental aspect of the human condition.
Lisa Olstein teaches at the University of Texas at Austin and is the author of four poetry collections published by Copper Canyon Press. Pain Studies is her first book of creative nonfiction.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
This nonfiction debut from poet Olstein (Late Empire), on her lifelong struggles with migraines, proves an allusive, sometimes obscure, but more often fascinating meditation. Crucial to Olstein's endeavor is what she identifies as pain's indescribable quality, and the impossibility of translating sensory perception directly into language. Thus, she offers relatively few descriptions of the physical experience of having a migraine, other than a mock-diagnostic list of non pain-related symptoms, and instead explores what other writers, such as Virginia Woolf, or cultural touchstones such as Joan of Arc, reveal about chronic pain. Some of the associations she draws such as to Joan aren't entirely clear, though Olstein suggests that she and the saint share in common similar experiences with "perception, hallucination, and, it seems a safe bet, great pain." But the relevance of other associations are more readily apparent. Describing the title character on TV's House, who suffers from chronic pain as a result of muscle death in his thigh, Olstein muses whether "his genius is linked to his pain," reflecting back to her own avocation as a writer. This extended lyric essay succeeds in delivering an intriguing look at a set of questions with wide relevance to an audience beyond migraine-sufferers: "Does our pain define us? Only if it's bad enough? Only if we let it?"