Richard Selzer

Richard Selzer (1928-2016), American Doctor-Writer, known for the Literature and Medicine Movement (2000 Photo)

Allen Richard Selzer (June 24, 1928 June 15, 2016) was an American surgeon and author.

Biography

He was born in Troy, New York, United States and raised there. His father was Julius Selzer, a general practitioner who practiced from the ground floor of the family home at Fifth Avenue in Troy. His mother, Gertrude Schneider Selzer, was an amateur singer who performed in local productions of musicals and opera. Richard Selzer graduated from Union College in 1948, with a B.S. and received his M.D. from Albany Medical College in 1953. He served in the Army for two years as a lieutenant in charge of a medical detachment. In 1960, following a surgical internship and residency at Yale University, he joined the faculty of Yale as a professor of surgery, where he remained until his retirement in 1985. Beginning in the 1970s, Selzer became well known as an author as well.

Selzer's books are generally collections of short stories, essays, and memoirs, including selections from his massive diary. But Imagine a Woman consists entirely of fiction, and he has written two full-length memoirs, Raising the Dead, and Down from Troy: A Doctor Comes of Age. With author and friend Peter Josyph, Selzer published a kind of spoken autobiography, What One Man Said to Another: Talks with Richard Selzer, which has also been recorded as a Blackstone audiobook with Josyph reading the part of Selzer and actor Raymond Todd reading the part of Josyph. Josyph also edited and illustrated a collection of Selzer's correspondence with him, called Letters to A Best Friend. Selzer's most recent books are Diary, which consists entirely of entries from the journal he has kept religiously for decades, and the novel Knife Song Korea, which is closely based on his experience as a very young surgeon in the U.S. Army in a remote Korean village after the close of the Korean War. The novel won three prizes for literary fiction.

Selzer died in North Branford, Connecticut, on June 15, 2016.

Family

He is preceded in death by his father, Julius Louis Selzer (1941); his mother, Gertrude Schneider Selzer (1987), and his brother, William Ephraim Selzer (2009). Survivors are his wife of 61 years, Janet White Selzer, and their three children: Sons Jonathan (Regine) and Larry (Rossi); and daughter Gretchen (Donna). They have seven grandchildren: Becky, Hank, Emily, Lucy, Ned, Danny, and Ellie. [1]

Published works

Among his published books are:

Includes "Imelda," the story about a dramatic event that occurred on a charity medical mission to Honduras. It is told by a medical student (Selzer as narrator) who went along to translate and to help any way he could, although as a third-year he admits to being terrified of making mistakes because he does not know much yet.

The student is in awe of Dr. Hugh Franciscus, the chief of plastic surgery at a major university medical center, who is volunteering his skills on this three-week trip. One patient, Imelda, has a cleft palate ("the defect was utterly hideous") that he will fix. But Imelda reacts to the anesthesia, has malignant hyperthermia, and dies within seconds. Dr. Franciscus secretly performs that operation on her corpse during the night. Does he do this to please her mother—Imelda can now be beautiful in Heaven—or is it for a slide presentation at his home university. Is this an act of compassion or a violation of medical ethics?

"Literature is uniquely able to offer our medical students encounters with powerful human experiences that have such mystery at their core," writes Daniel Burr about "Imelda." "The high-stakes nature of surgery provides an exciting setting for Selzer's work and is one reason his stories appeal to students in medicine and literature courses." [2]

Selzer returned home from a long speaking tour in 1991 and fell ill with Legionnaire's disease, an atypical pneumonia caused by a type of Legionella bacteria that can be contracted from infected air-conditioning systems. It was first identified at the 1976 American Legion convention in Philadelphia. He was admitted to the intensive care unit at Yale-New Haven hospital and fell into a coma for 23 days. Not expected to live, he was given experimental steroids and recovered. Because he could not bear the fact that three weeks had been erased from his memory, he reimagined, during a long convalescence, what his illness had been like. It became Raising the Dead. Its three parts are a retrospective on the 19th-century unanaesthetized mastectomy of the novelist Fanny Burney, who also had no advance notice of her operation; an account of his nursing care and his resurrection after being pronounced dead; and the period during which speaking was difficult from the prolonged endotracheal intubation and during which he experienced delusions about floating down the Nile and that his inflating bed was "carnivorous."

"And an amazing account it is," wrote Joel D. Howell about "a rhapsodic tale of wonder, of noble beauty and mundane tragedy, a tale like none other; it is a tale -- as the title states -- about 'raising the dead.' Selzer has written many books, but none as moving and profound as this one." As seen in another pathography, Dr. Paul Kalanithi's 2015 memoir, When Breath Becomes Air, Selzer is also a doctor who writes his own illness narrative about being a patient in Raising the Dead. "In this tour de force," wrote Howell, "Richard Selzer has given us one writer's truth about life and illness and, perhaps, death."[3]

Selzer included his short story "Poe's Light-house," inspired by Edgar Allan Poe's "The Light-House", in The Doctor Stories, published by Picador. Irreverent Media Ltd. has optioned and developed Selzer's short story as the feature film The Light-house. As of January 2010, production has been stagnant.[4]

Selzer Prize for Writing

In 2010, The Abaton, a medical humanities literary and arts journal produced by Des Moines University, awarded the inaugural Selzer Prize for Writing. The award was created to honor Selzer for his contribution to the medical humanities and medical profession as a whole. The award will be given annually to a medical student whose essay or story stands out for its quality and humanistic focus. The award winner by year:

Literature and medicine movement

"It was Richard Selzer," according to Rita Charon, founder of the Narrative Medicine Program at Columbia University's College of Physicians and Surgeons, "who was among the first physicians to understand the power of writing and reading fiction within medicine. He helped to open up this whole territory to those of us who came after." [5] Proliferating programs, also known as Health Humanities; Medicine, Literature, and Society; Bioethics and Humanities,et al. [6] draw from the evolving canon of literature and medicine,[7] which is now used in 2/3 of the 171 medical schools in the United States, with Selzer's stories and essays being a mainstay of the curriculum.

Bioethics in literature

Selzer wrote a 1976 Esquire essay, "What I Saw at the Abortion"; he drew readers into the fetus’ consciousness, which sparked fiery and divergent reactions. His engagement with public issues continued in the 1990 Redbook story, "Follow Your Heart," showing how organ transplants can tear one family apart and heal another, emotionally and spiritually. His 1991 essay in The New York Times, "A Question of Mercy", describes how he was drawn into a mercy killing situation at a time well before Jack Kevorkian made physician-assisted suicide a subject of heated national debate. The attempt was botched because Selzer, fearful as he was of being charged with murder, could not be there to administer the final lethal dose. In 2016 death-with-dignity is a right legally recognized in four states.[8] Selzer's exploration into the question of autonomy over the body continues to resonate in our culture today, with his literature bringing richer shades of truth than the political discourse allows. When Leon Kass, Chairman of the President's Council on Bioethics, included four of Selzer's pieces in the 2003 anthology Being Human: Readings from the President's Council on Bioethics, it underscored Kass's view of Selzer: "A man who lives with a knife, has his hands on organs, but preserves wonder and awe, is special."[9]

Teacher of medicine and literature

Beginning in the 1950s, when he was in private practice and an assistant clinical professor at what is now the Yale School of Medicine, until 1985, when he retired, he taught, without pay, eager young medical students who wanted to learn his art of medicine, expressed as "the diagnostic embrace."[10]

He mentored aspiring writers, such as Erich Segal and John Irving, and held a medical student writing workshop at Yale from the early 1980s until 2011, when Lorence Gutterman took over. After retiring from medicine, he taught at such places as Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy, New York, and Sarah Lawrence College in Bronxville, New York.

Plays, art critiques, medical readers’ theater, and dance

After retiring from medicine, Selzer wrote a play, The Black Swan, based on his short story. It was produced in St. Louis in 1994. Playwright David Rabe adapted Selzer's "A Question of Mercy" into a 1998 play performed at the Long Wharf Theater in New Haven, CT.[11] Selzer became an art critic, lecturing on "The Ivory Crucifixion," "Rothko's #3 Red," and The Veteran and St. Peter, first at Yale Art Gallery and then in 1998 at The Cooper Union School of Architecture in New York. They are published in Selzer's The Whistler's Room (2004).

Medical Readers’ Theater (2002), edited by Todd Savitt, contains the scripts for "Fetishes," "Imelda," and "Follow Your Heart." Selzer's stories, "Sarcophagus," "Fetishes," "Imelda," "Whither Thou Goest," and "Atrium," from The Doctor Stories became a theatrical event in 2003 at the University of Colorado, Denver, adapted in collaboration with playwright Kathryn G. Maes. Selzer acted his own part. In 2011 "Diary of an Infidel," a semiautobiographical story about Selzer's time at San Giorgio monastery, across the lagoon from Venice, became a staged reading scripted by Ed Lynch and performed at the Yale Art Gallery. It doubled as a moving tribute to Selzer.[12]

A ballet adaptation of Selzer's short story, "Luis," by playwright Eric Coble and choreographer Mark Tomasic of Verb Ballets, was performed in 2006 at the International Festival of Literature and Medicine, commissioned by Hiram College Center for Literature, Medicine, and Biomedical Humanities, et al. It is a dark fairytale about a scavenger in a Peruvian dump who thinks he has found a fallen star, which is instead radioactive material.

Legacy (Ars longa, vita brevis)

"If I hadn't become a doctor and writer, I think that I would have had an early death, after a short and unhappy life. It was the combined power of Medicine and Literature that saved me for what was to be my destiny." —Richard Selzer said to his biographer, Mahala Yates Stripling.[13]

When asked about his legacy, his quick reply was, "Well, my children and grandchildren, of course." He admitted that his work was read, somewhere, all over the world. "I don’t mean to do it. I just want to write. But people respond to the power of literature. It's a dangerous thing: you can sway people by the power of language and make them do things according to your will. I don’t want to do that. But my work, written decades ago, is used in some anthology or collection, and I have discovered that things I say are counted on by some people today" (Selzer to Stripling).

Honors, fellowships, and awards

References

  1. New Haven Register http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/nhregister/obituary.aspx?pid=180375329
  2. Burr, Daniel A. PhD. Academic Medicine: October 2009 (84.10: 1403) http://journals.lww.com/academicmedicine/Fulltext/2009/10000/Commentary.28.aspx
  3. Howell, Joel D. New England Journal of Medicine 23 June 1994. http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJM199406233302522#t=article
  4. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0926311/
  5. Charon, Rita. Quoted in http://www.hektoeninternational.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=1843
  6. Health Humanities Programs in the United States, Hiram College, The Center for Literature and Medicine. (March 2016) http://www.hiram.edu/centers-of-distinction/litmed/baccalaureate-health-humanities
  7. Jones, A.H. Literature and Medicine, an evolving canon.http://www.fondazionelanza.it/medicalhumanities/texts/Jones%20AH,%20Literature%20and%20medicine%20an%20evolving%20canon.pdf
  8. https://www.deathwithdignity.org/learn/death-with-dignity-acts
  9. Kass Audio Recording http://medicalhumanities.net/selzer_and_kass_speak.html
  10. Selzer, Richard. "The Diagnostic Embrace." Down from Troy: A Doctor Comes of Age. NY: Wm Morrow, 160.
  11. Theater; the ultimate moment, when reason fails. http://www.nytimes.com/1998/03/01/nyregion/theater-the-ultimate-moment-when-reason-fails.html
  12. A Portable Play by Dr. Richard Selzer http://news.yale.edu/2010/03/17/portable-play-dr-richard-selzer-will-premiere-yale
  13. Doctor of Arts: the life of Richard Selzer http://medicalhumanities.net/selzer_biography.html
  14. http://www.sunypress.edu/p-4876-knife-song-korea.aspx

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/4/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.