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Book and Media Reviews |

Galen and the Rhetoric of Healing

Dorothy Porter, PhD
JAMA. 2009;301(19):2050-2051. doi:10.1001/jama.2009.721.
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It is difficult to make a highly scholarly analysis an enjoyable and entertaining tale. Susan P. Mattern, however, skillfully dissects the rhetorical structure of Galen's case histories of his patients to offer a delightfully intriguing view not just of the great physician's medical practice but of his character and his social world.

In second-century Rome, the well-traveled physician from Pergamum rapidly gained prominence through his successful treatment of important friends and contacts among his father's patrician class and ultimately was requested by co-Emperors Marcus Aurelius and Lucius Verus to serve in the Germanic wars. He declined but remained in Rome to treat Aurelius' son, Commodus, and, after Verus' death, the Emperor Septimius Severus.

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Galen and Hippocrates. Engraving taken from Lipsiae: Georgii Heinrici Frommanni, 1677. Hippocrates (right) and Galen are standing beside each other, a bush between them. Where Hippocrates touches the bush it is in flower, whereas Galen's side is nothing but thorns. Image courtesy of and with permission from the National Library of Medicine, National Institutes of Health.

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