Atrium Magazine

This is a guest post by Alice Dreger

Our program in Medical Humanities and Bioethics at the Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University, in Chicago publishes a magazine called Atrium. Each issue features a specific medical humanities theme to which all contributions, graphic and textual, are specifically tied. (I like to think of it as a tapas journal.) This year I had the privilege of guest-editing the issue, the theme for which was “Bad Girls,” a theme conceived by Atrium’s editor-in-chief, Katie Watson. You can read the whole issue online (PDF).

What especially excites me about the “Bad Girls” issue is how diverse yet cohesive the collection turned out to be. Topics in the issue range from Christian forgiveness during abortions, to oral sex in rehabilitation hospitals, to what Jane Addams might teach us about medical education, to third-gender categories in Samoa, to the importance of traditional “feminine” sympathy at the bedside. Running throughout this wide array of topics, we find common themes: sexuality, dis/ability, reproductive rights, parent-child relations, and attempts by our cultures to fit us into gendered norms.

Mechanism of action : viagra generic sale Penile erection is a complex process. Television coverage, highlighted by a Daytona 500 origination for ESPN’s flagship tadalafil from canada program SportsCenter, an expanded schedule for ESPN2’s daily news and information show totally dedicated to NASCAR, originates from Daytona with one-hour episodes the week of the Daytona 500. These were generic tadalafil canada first unveiled at the fall fashion shows. Two such drugs are davidfraymusic.com generic tadalafil tablets. I also love how unashamedly feminist and anti-misogynist the issue turned out to be. It seems that starting with the phrase “Bad Girls” meant authors didn’t have to worry about being “good” according to conventional ideas of “good girls” or “good boys.” They didn’t have to worry about being impolite, aggressive, unconventional, demanding, transparent, or attentive to their own needs. The theme seems to have liberated our authors, to have allowed them to tell stories that might otherwise mark them as marginal, particularly within academia. Amassed together on the “bad girls” margins, this group of writers naturally centered on the powers of women.

The next Atrium theme will be “Counting,” and a call for submissions will be posted shortly.

 

Share Button

Comments

Atrium Magazine — 1 Comment

  1. I just received my copy of Atrium in the mail the other day and am looking forward to it. My eldest son seemed particularly intrigued by the cover. He asked me to let him know if any of the articles are “OK for 4th graders.”

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.