"Diagnosis: Truth and Tales provokes thought rather than simple assent. It offers a set of ideas that enable its readers’ various responses rather than prescribing an inevitable conclusion."
Jeffrey Brown, University of the Sciences in Philadelphia, Medical Humanities
"Diagnosis is exciting and important for its close focus on scenes of diagnosis and their recurrence and significance in lived experiences and cultural representations (including film and graphic narrative). Jutel gives us enjoyable and accessible tools for thinking critically about the illness narratives that shape our lives."
Martha Stoddard Holmes, Literature and Writing Department, California State University, San Marcos
"Annemarie Goldstein Jutel offers a fresh and insightful examination of how patients and doctors shape stories of diagnosis. Her eminently readable scholarship reveals the power of these narratives to transform our lives – our identities, roles, and futures. This book will help both physicians and patients navigate the difficult terrain of illness and medical care."
Martha Montello, Department of Global Health and Social Medicine, Blavatnik Institute at Harvard Medical School
"This book makes a needed contribution to conversations about health humanities and cultural studies and medicine, while hitting the right tone and balance for an interdisciplinary audience. Using a broad swath of cultural materials, including movies, books, graphics, and other expressions of popular culture, Annemarie Goldstein Jutel builds an enjoyable interaction with the book."
Sarah de Leeuw, Northern Medical Program and Geography Program, University of Northern British Columbia
"Annemarie Goldstein Jutel’s work provided me with a respite from my cancer, even though I was reading about cancer."
Raquel Scherr, University Writing Program and Summer Abroad Program, University of California, Davis
"Annemarie Jutel is our most knowledgeable scholar of diagnosis, and diagnosis sets the tone for how patients experience their illnesses. Jutel tells many tales of diagnosis from multiple perspectives, ranging from medicine to popular culture, showing diagnosis to be less a moment than a process, and less a solution than an initiatory gesture."
Arthur W. Frank, Department of Sociology, University of Calgary