The Female Voice In Illness Patricia Stanley Analysis

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Women’s Voice Enacting Cures: Providing Attention to Ending the Illness of Isolation in Health Illness does not discriminate nor does it pick and choose those in which it affects. Sickness has a trajectory of its own accord, with the ability to conversely create a difference of life for the ill person and for those who surround the sick as caregiver, family, friends, and even society. It creates a particular circumstance of becoming something no longer considered normal, something which breeds loneliness and isolation for those it touches. Through the voice of women, one can see how this birth of isolation out of illness may begin to phase into a greater sense of community. To bear witness to this event, one can turn to the writing The Female Voice In Illness: An Antidote to Alienation, a Call for Connection by Patricia Stanley. Stanley takes aim in expressing this cure of community from stories and narratives by females and depleting the sense …show more content…

Stanley contributes that a significant consequence of illness on both the sick individual and the caregiver is that of isolation (Stanley 2007). Although this sense of being alone compared to the outside world is not merely a concept driven purely by the illness itself, rather it has been designed from society through the course of time. Stanley acknowledges that this phenomena of forcing isolation upon the sick is not a new practice, on the contrary it is an activity that the Western culture has developed to separate those who care for the sick person and the ill individual from the comparative healthy society (Stanley 2007). This occurrence has not only physically moved the sick but also created the transition of being perceived as an outsider upon them instead of being a normal or health individual. Isolation, as Stanley contends, is bred out of this physical and perceptive placement of being not normal, or the “other” (Stanley

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