Tag: Literary Portraits
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Theodore Dreiser
Theodore Dreiser (1871–1945) occupies a unique and often controversial place in American literature. Best remembered for his unflinching realism, his exploration of ambition, desire, and social constraint, and his massive, detail-laden novels, Dreiser was both acclaimed and censured during his lifetime. His works, particularly Sister Carrie (1900) and An American Tragedy (1925), stand as landmark…
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W. Somerset Maugham: Medical
William Somerset Maugham (1874–1965) is remembered primarily as a master of the short story and as a novelist whose lucid style made him one of the most widely read writers of the twentieth century. Yet beneath his literary reputation lies another identity: that of a trained physician. Medicine was not just a stage in Maugham’s…
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Victor Hugo: Medical
Victor Hugo (1802–1885), towering figure of French Romanticism, is remembered primarily for his vast literary achievements—Les Misérables, Notre-Dame de Paris, and countless poems that gave voice to the downtrodden and the exiled. Yet, woven into his life and works are subtle but significant medical threads. His experiences with illness, his compassion for the suffering poor,…
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Herman Melville: Medical
Herman Melville (1819–1891), best remembered for his monumental novel Moby-Dick, was a writer whose life and work were profoundly shaped by medical themes. Although he is often placed within the canon of American Romanticism, Melville’s writings reveal not only philosophical and theological concerns but also a deep engagement with the body, illness, and the medical…
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George Bernard Shaw: Medical
George Bernard Shaw (1856–1950), the Irish playwright, critic, polemicist, and Nobel Prize winner, was one of the great satirists of modern times. He left his mark not only on literature and theater but also on social and political thought. Among his many lifelong concerns, medicine and public health occupied a special place. Shaw was at…
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Rudyard Kipling: Medical
Rudyard Kipling (1865–1936), the British writer best known for The Jungle Book, Kim, and his haunting short stories, lived a life profoundly intertwined with medicine. Though not a physician, Kipling’s experiences of illness, grief, and global travel exposed him to medical realities that shaped both his personal life and his literary imagination. His encounters with…
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Samuel Johnson: Medical
Samuel Johnson, immortalized as “Dr. Johnson,” was not only the towering man of letters of eighteenth-century England but also a figure whose life was profoundly shaped by medicine—or the lack of it. His Dictionary of the English Language (1755) cemented his place in literary history, yet behind the scholar’s wit and moral wisdom lay a…
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Ernest Hemingway: Medical
Ernest Hemingway, a figure of immense influence in the 20th century, is often remembered for his public persona as an adventurer, hunter, and war correspondent. His adventurous life, well-documented and marked by personal struggles, began with the outbreak of the First World War in 1914. As an ambulance driver on the Italian front, he was…
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Goethe: Medical
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832) is universally celebrated as one of Germany’s greatest literary figures, the author of Faust and The Sorrows of Young Werther. However, his profound contributions to medicine and natural science remain less widely known despite their impact on medical thought and practice. Goethe’s approach to medicine was revolutionary for its time,…
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Galen: Medical
Few figures in the history of medicine have left a legacy as profound and enduring as Claudius Galenus, better known simply as Galen. Born in Pergamon in 129 CE, Galen was educated in the vibrant intellectual centers of the Greco-Roman world, studying philosophy, anatomy, and medicine in places such as Smyrna, Corinth, and Alexandria. His…
