Vol. 37 No. 3 (2020): June
Historic Note

The doctor as a literary character in the Modern Age

Walter Ledermann D.
Centro de Estudios Humanistas Julio Prado

Published 2020-07-02

How to Cite

1.
Ledermann D. W. The doctor as a literary character in the Modern Age. Rev. Chilena. Infectol. [Internet]. 2020 Jul. 2 [cited 2025 Nov. 4];37(3). Available from: https://revinf.cl/index.php/revinf/article/view/787

Abstract

The doctor has been from de Antiquity a victim of the people’s affective ambivalence, who loves and hates him accord his success or failures. Some rant against the medical guild, but are proud to be patients of one or another doctor, more o less celebrated, referring familiarly to him as Tony or Jim. A certain envy hurts the doctor’s image, countered by gratitude, but finally, as times goes by, the continuous progress of medicine has been improving the public perception about the medical work. A quick review of the Modern Age literature, personal, whimsical and may be imperfect, from Michel de Montaigne, in the sixteenth century until. A. J. Cronin in the twentieth, shows the evolution of the doctor as a literary character, first as a tricky ignorant, after like a clown, later fighting epidemics and ending as a self-sacrificing medical researcher.