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1.
Rev. méd. Chile ; 142(11): 1458-1466, nov. 2014. ilus
Article in Spanish | LILACS | ID: lil-734882

ABSTRACT

Diego Rivera is one of the artistic giants of the 20th century. His many original creations included landscapes, portraits and large murals created in both Mexico and the United States. Rivera ventured into many styles-cubism, naturalism and narrative realism-with great success. Rivera’s murals build on those of the Renaissance, pre-historic and colonial civilizations of Mexico. Biological and medical topics and their history form an important concern in Rivera’s work, present in many of his murals in a highly informative and creative manner. His two History of Cardiology murals present an original and comprehensive account of the developments of this medical specialty from pre-historic to modern times. His History of Medicine in Mexico (The people demands health) mural is a creatively and vigorously fashioned and highly dynamic and synthetic vision of the relationships between pre-historic and modern medicine in Mexico and its social foundations. Medical topics such as vaccines and vaccination, embryology and surgery are inventively and accurately presented in the large mural, Detroit Industry. The trigger and impetus for the concern of Rivera for these topics of life and death, and the exceedingly ground-breaking way he presents them, appear to stem from his rational materialism, his concern for collective wellbeing, his belief in progress through scientific developments and political action and his commitment to understand Mexican and American history.


Subject(s)
History, 20th Century , Cardiology/history , Paintings/history , Health Services Needs and Demand/history , Mexico , Michigan
2.
EMHJ-Eastern Mediterranean Health Journal. 2001; 7 (3): 336-347
in English | IMEMR | ID: emr-157937

ABSTRACT

A brief account is given of attitudes towards mental health and the development of psychiatry in the Middle East from an historical perspective. The Middle East is considered as a cultural entity and the influence of the beliefs and practices of ancient times on the collective mind of the people of the Region is discussed


Subject(s)
Humans , Arab World/history , Attitude to Health/ethnology , Health Services Needs and Demand/history , History, 15th Century , History, 17th Century , History, 16th Century , History, 18th Century , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Islam/history , Psychiatry/history
3.
Cad. saúde pública ; 11(1): 5-33, jan.-mar.1995.
Article in Portuguese | LILACS | ID: lil-156039

ABSTRACT

Em torno de duas sinédoques históricas, Ulisses e Fausto, o texto retoma a etimologia do termo saúde, tratando-a como uma unidade entre as "necessidades existenciais" e as "necessidades propriamente humanas" que desemboca no desafio de satisfazer o "conservar a vida" e, ao mesmo tempo, o "passar por cima de, saltando". Ambos os significados encontram-se, presentes na atitude de Ulisses em näo sucumbir ante o canto das sereias e no desejo de Fausto em elevar-se da vida cotidiana. Criticam-se alguns aspectos da concepçäo marxista da filosofia da história e do marxismo-estruturalista de Althusser. Analisa , à luz da teoria marxista-helleriana, a hipótese de que o alvo da 8ª Conferência Nacional de Saúde teria sido o homem-particular e näo o indivíduo, pois a saúde ali é tratada apenas como uma "necessidade existencial", näo objetivando o humano genérico. Recomenda a construçäo de "suturas epistemológicas" entre natureza/sociedade, entre vida cotidiana/universalidade e entre o jovem e o velho Marx.


Subject(s)
Health Services Needs and Demand/history , Public Health/history
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