Some essays slapped, some I skimmedāletās unpack the highs, lows, and why it still sparked big questions. Good, Not Great (But Worth Talking About)
Leslie Jamisonās The Empathy Exams is one of those essay collections that gets talked about a lot. But hereās the thing: for me, it was goodānot great. Some chapters gripped me hard (the opening empathy exam, the Barkley Marathons, that brutal last essay on womenās pain), while others⦠letās just say my eyes skimmed faster than my brain.
In this Afterparty, I dig into:
- š The wild idea of doctors taking an empathy exam with actors playing patients.
- š¦ The long, gross Morgellons essay (I lost my appetite on that one).
- š The grit and madness of the Barkley Marathons chapter.
- 𩸠The cutting finale on how womenās pain and blood (Carrie, anyone?) get represented in our culture.
What I kept circling back to was this question: when does empathy become real, and when is it just a performance? And what happens when writing itself turns lived pain into spectacle?
Some parts of this book are unforgettable, others forgettableābut that mix is exactly why I want to talk about it with you.
š What chapters stuck with you? Did you skim some too? And how did that Carrie essay land for you? Drop your thoughts belowāletās make this a proper Afterparty.
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