Crisis, Feminism, and Existentialism: Re-reading El-Saadawi’s Memoirs of a Woman Doctor in COVID -19 times

Suhad Daher-Nashif
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Abstract

In her Memoirs of a Woman Doctor , Dr. Nawal El-Saadawi, an Egyptian physician, writer and feminist, describes the development of her existential questions as a human being and a doctor throughout her life changes and the interaction with her socio-cultural patriarchal context. Following a crisis in her professional identity, Dr. El-Saadawi questions the meaning of doctoring, the doctor-patient relationship, and life as well as the absurdity of death and alienation. A young woman died while giving birth to her first child, and Dr. El-Saadawi's failure to save the woman's life changed her self-positioning in relation to medicine and the sanctity of science. This experience caused her to sanctify human beings and the humanity of doctors, rather than sanctifying their knowledge only, and created an acute awareness of the link between her body, mind and soul. She writes "The focus of the struggle inside me widened out from masculinity and femininity to embrace humankind as a whole. Human beings appeared to be insignificant creatures in spite of their muscles, their brain cells and the complexity of their arterial and nervous systems. A small microbe, invisible to the naked eye, could be breathed in through the nose and eat away at the cells of the lungs. An unidentifiable virus could strike at random and make the cells of the liver or spleen or any other part of the body multiply at a crazy rate and devour everything around them [...] I found my feet taking me in a completely new direction." (p. 21). In the end, she finds relief for her soul in her love for a musician and attributes music to rescuing her from darkness. Drawing on content-thematic analysis of the memoirs, in this presentation I make an analogy between the crisis that Dr. El-Saadawi experienced, and the potential crises that health care providers (HCPs) faced during their work in the first stages of the COVID-19 pandemic. Through the existential and philosophical questions suggested by Dr. El-Saadawi, in this presentation, I suggest that we look behind the scenes of the ICU and think in-depth about healthcare providers' existential experiences during the COVID-19 outbreak - a global crisis that can be very personal for the HCPs. We will discuss how the crisis and facing death on daily basis could influence healthcare providers' existential and philosophical perceptions, when they are unable to control a virus and save lives. [ FROM AUTHOR] Copyright of QScience Connect is the property of Hamad bin Khalifa University Press (HBKU Press) and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full . (Copyright applies to all s.)
危机、女权主义和存在主义:重新阅读萨达维的《新冠肺炎时代的女医生回忆录
在《女医生回忆录》中,埃及医生、作家和女权主义者纳瓦尔·萨达维博士描述了她作为人类和医生的存在问题的发展历程,以及她与社会文化父权背景的互动。在经历了职业身份危机之后,萨达维医生开始质疑医生的意义、医患关系、生命,以及死亡和异化的荒谬。一名年轻妇女在生第一个孩子时死亡,萨达维医生未能挽救这名妇女的生命,改变了她在医学和科学的神圣性方面的自我定位。这段经历使她神圣化了人类和医生的人性,而不仅仅是神圣化了他们的知识,并使她敏锐地意识到自己的身体、思想和灵魂之间的联系。她写道:“我内心斗争的焦点从男性和女性扩大到拥抱整个人类。尽管人类有肌肉,有脑细胞,有复杂的动脉和神经系统,但人类似乎是微不足道的生物。一种肉眼看不见的小微生物可以通过鼻子吸入,并吞噬肺部细胞。一种无法识别的病毒可以随机攻击,使肝脏、脾脏或身体任何其他部位的细胞以疯狂的速度繁殖,吞噬周围的一切。我发现我的双脚把我带到了一个全新的方向。”(21页)。最后,她在对一个音乐家的爱中找到了灵魂的解脱,并把音乐从黑暗中拯救出来。根据对回忆录的内容专题分析,我在本次演讲中将萨达维博士经历的危机与卫生保健提供者在COVID-19大流行的第一阶段工作中面临的潜在危机进行了类比。通过El-Saadawi博士提出的存在主义和哲学问题,在这次演讲中,我建议我们看看ICU的幕后,深入思考医疗服务提供者在COVID-19爆发期间的存在主义经历——这是一场对医疗服务提供者来说非常个人化的全球危机。我们将讨论当医疗保健提供者无法控制病毒并拯救生命时,危机和日常面对死亡如何影响他们的存在主义和哲学观念。QScience Connect的版权归哈马德·本·哈利法大学出版社(HBKU出版社)所有,未经版权所有者明确书面许可,其内容不得复制或通过电子邮件发送到多个网站或发布到listserv。但是,用户可以打印、下载或通过电子邮件发送文章供个人使用。这可以删节。对副本的准确性不作任何保证。用户应参阅原始出版版本的材料的完整。(版权适用于所有人。)
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