Kempster Peter A, Lees Andrew J
Neurosciences Department, Monash Medical Centre, , Clayton, Victoria, Australia.
Pract Neurol. 2013 Dec;13(6):372-6. doi: 10.1136/practneurol-2013-000597. Epub 2013 Sep 4.
When searching for clues to reach a diagnosis, neurologists often empathise with the detective who is trying to solve a case. The premise of this article is that detective stories have been part of the fabric of neurology ever since the time that it evolved into a discrete medical speciality. We will examine how this form of narrative has found expression in detective mystery fiction and popular science publications created by 20th century neurologist physician-writers. We will also investigate the power of the neurologist's alter ego, Sherlock Holmes: his relationship to founders of clinical neuroscience such as Jean-Martin Charcot, William Gowers and Sigmund Freud, and his influences on neurological practice and its literary traditions.
在寻找诊断线索时,神经科医生常常会与试图破案的侦探产生共鸣。本文的前提是,自神经学发展成为一门独立的医学专科以来,侦探故事就一直是神经学结构的一部分。我们将探讨这种叙事形式在20世纪神经科医生兼作家创作的侦探悬疑小说和科普出版物中是如何体现的。我们还将研究神经科医生的化身夏洛克·福尔摩斯的影响力:他与让-马丁·沙可、威廉·高尔斯和西格蒙德·弗洛伊德等临床神经科学创始人的关系,以及他对神经学实践及其文学传统的影响。