Cultural depictions of tuberculosis
Through its effect on the population as a whole and major artists in different fields, tuberculosis has influenced history and become a theme in literature, music, opera, art, and film. The disease was for centuries associated with poetic and artistic qualities in its sufferers, and many artistic figures either had the disease themselves or were closely associated with others who did.
Context
Tuberculosis, known variously as consumption, phthisis, and the great white plague, was long thought to be associated with poetic and artistic qualities in its sufferers, and was indeed also known as "the romantic disease".[2] Major artistic figures such as the poets John Keats, Percy Bysshe Shelley, and Edgar Allan Poe, the composer Frederic Chopin,[3] the novelists Charlotte Brontë, Fyodor Dostoevsky, Thomas Mann, W. Somerset Maugham,[4] and Robert Louis Stevenson, and the artists Alice Neel,[5] Jean-Antoine Watteau, Elizabeth Siddal, Marie Bashkirtseff, Edvard Munch, Aubrey Beardsley and Amedeo Modigliani either had the disease themselves or were surrounded by people who did. A widespread belief was that tuberculosis assisted artistic talent, as witness the number of great artists who were affected. Physical mechanisms proposed for this effect included the slight fever and the toxaemia caused by the disease, which allegedly helped them to see life more clearly and to act decisively. In 1680 John Bunyan referred to it as "the captain of all these men of death".[1][6][7]
Portrayals
Opera
Several major operas have exploited the theme of heroines dying tragically of tuberculosis, including Mimì in Puccini's opera La bohème.[7] Giuseppe Verdi's La Traviata features the consumptive Violetta Valéry, based on Marguerite Gautier in Alexandre Dumas, fils's 1848 novel La Dame aux Camélias. In Jacques Offenbach's opera "The Tales of Hoffmann", Antonia has tuberculosis and is under the control of a Svengali-like quack doctor who forces her to sing herself to death by conjuring the shade of her dead mother, an opera singer.[7] Numerous stage and film adaptations have been made, usually titled Camille or The Lady of the Camellias in English-language versions, and more loosely, as the 2001 film Moulin Rouge!, where Satine dies of tuberculosis.[8] The real life Paris courtesan Marie Duplessis, the historical Lady of the Camellias, died of the disease at age 23.[7]
Theatre
A variety of plays, too, have made use of the theme of a character dying of tuberculosis, including Eugene O'Neill's Long Day's Journey into Night, where the protagonist, Edmund, is diagnosed with tuberculosis at the start of the play; his mental anguish forms a substantial part of the drama.[9]
Chopin and The Nightingale, a dramatic reading with music in six acts by Cecilia and Jens Jorgensen for narrator, two sopranos and piano, enacts the true-life romance of the composer Frederic Chopin, who had the disease, and "the Swedish nightingale", the singer Jenny Lind, with reference to Hans Christian Andersen's story "The Nightingale".[3]
Novels
19th century Russian literature frequently made use of characters with tuberculosis. Fyodor Dostoevsky used the theme of the consumptive nihilist repeatedly, with Katerina Ivanovna in Crime and Punishment; Kirillov in The Possessed, and both Ippolit and Marie in The Idiot. Turgenev did the same with Bazarov in Father and Sons.[10]
The disease features, too, in a variety of English novels of the Victorian era, including Charles Dickens's 1848 Dombey and Son, Elizabeth Gaskell's 1855 North and South, and Mrs. Humphry Ward's 1900 Eleanor.[11][12]
Several novels by different authors have been set in a sanatorium for tuberculosis sufferers, including Thomas Mann's The Magic Mountain,[13] Beatrice Harraden's Ships That Pass in the Night,[2] W. Somerset Maugham's 1938 short story "Sanatorium", set in the north of Scotland and based on his own experience in such a Scottish sanatorium in 1919,[4] A. E. Ellis's The Rack,[14] Andrea Barrett's The Air We Breathe, set in upper New York State,[15] and Linda Grant's The Dark Circle.[16]
Some novelists have used the tuberculosis theme repeatedly in their work. For example, the disease is the likely cause of the spinal deformity of the hunchback in Victor Hugo's 1831 novel Notre-Dame de Paris, while Fantine becomes ill and ultimately dies from consumption in his 1862 Les Miserables.[7]
Many novels have tuberculosis as a major plot element. For example, The Constant Gardener by John le Carré, and its movie adaptation directed by Fernando Meirelles, tells the tale of the testing of anti-tuberculosis drugs on unwitting subjects in Africa.[17] Erich Maria Remarque's novel Three Comrades focuses on Patricia Hollman's love of life in light of her ultimately futile struggle with tuberculosis.[13] In the 1915 novel Anne of the Island, the third in the Anne of Green Gables series, Ruby Gillis, one of Anne's childhood friends, dies of "the galloping consumption".[18] Little Eva's romanticised death of consumption occurs over several chapters in Harriet Beecher Stowe's 1852 novel Uncle Tom's Cabin.[13]
The disease is not limited to human characters, but can help to portray grim social realism in a novel. Upton Sinclair's novel The Jungle portrays tuberculosis as common among cattle reaching the meat-packing plants of Chicago; consumption is a common illness for packers. Sinclair wrote that "men welcomed tuberculosis in the cattle they were feeding, because it made them fatten more quickly".[19]
Some novels take a medical point of view on the disease, with doctors as major characters, and sometimes an intense use of medical language and procedure. For example, in A. J. Cronin's best-known novel, The Citadel (1937), made into a 1938 film of the same name by King Vidor, the idealistic protagonist, Dr. Andrew Manson, is dedicated to treating Welsh miners suffering from tuberculosis. He later assists a specialist in that disease in successfully performing a pneumothorax on a girl who is dying from the disease.[20] Shame is brought to Sheilagh Fielding's Newfoundland family in Wayne Johnston's The Colony of Unrequited Dreams, as she has tuberculosis even though her father is a doctor.[21]
Nonfiction
Among the many nonfiction treatments of tuberculosis, Illness as Metaphor by Susan Sontag (1979) compares the metaphorical portrayal of the disease to cancer.[13] In his autobiography Angela's Ashes, Frank McCourt portrays the prevalence and impact of consumption during his childhood in Ireland.[22] In The Plague and I the author Betty MacDonald describes her nine months stay at a tuberculosis sanatorium and depicts the pre-antibiotics methods of tuberculosis treatment.[23]
Film
Many films have dramatised the effects of tuberculosis. In the 1936 film Camille Greta Garbo portrays Marguerite Gautier, who dies from the disease.[13] In the 1945 film The Bells of St. Mary's, Ingrid Bergman portrays Sister Benedict, a nun who suffers from tuberculosis.[24] Drunken Angel, a 1948 film by Akira Kurosawa, is the story of a doctor (Takashi Shimura) who is obsessed with curing tuberculosis in his patients, including a young yakuza (Toshirō Mifune) whose illness is being used by his organization as a biological weapon.[25] In the first Zatoichi movie (1962), Ichi's opponent Hirate has the disease, making him wish to die fighting Ichi.[26] In the 1993 film Tombstone the character Doc Holliday is referred to as a "lunger", and tuberculosis motivates his actions throughout the film. He dies of consumption near the end.[27] In the 1994 film Heavenly Creatures, directed by Peter Jackson, Juliet Hulme had the disease, and her fear of being sent away 'for the good of her health' played a large role in determining subsequent actions.[28] Jane Campion's 2009 film Bright Star describes the romantic relationship of Fanny Brawne and the poet John Keats, ending with Keats's death of the disease, aged 25.[13]
Fine art
Several major artists have depicted tuberculosis from their personal experience. Rembrandt's wife Saskia seems to have died of the disease aged 29; he drew her both when sick and on her deathbed.[29] Edvard Munch returned to the theme many times in his career, including his paintings The Dead Mother and The Sick Child, of his mother and his sister Sophie, both of whom died of the disease.[30][31][29] Claude Monet's Camille Monet sur son lit de mort shows his first wife Camille on her deathbed.[29] Eugeen Van Mieghem's Facing Death depicts his wife Augustine lying sick with the disease.[29] Alice Neel's 1940 painting T.B. Harlem depicts a tuberculosis ward in New York.[5]
The permanent collection of the American Visionary Art Museum contains a life-size applewood sculpture, Recovery, of a tuberculosis sufferer with a sunken chest. It is the only known work by an anonymous patient in an English asylum who died of the disease in the 1950s.[32]
Music
A tuberculosis theme runs through American blues music. Jimmie Rodgers (1897–1933), country music singer, sang about the woes of his tuberculosis in the song "T.B. Blues" (co-written with Raymond E. Hall) which he recorded in 1931 at San Antonio, Texas.[13] He also recorded Whippin’ That Old T.B. in 1932, but ultimately died of the disease days after a New York City recording session. The tuberculosis theme is reworked in Van Morrison's song "T.B. Sheets", in which the narrator nurses a girl who is dying of tuberculosis.[33]
Anime and manga
Tuberculosis is a frequent theme in anime and manga. For example, an early work by the influential author and illustrator Osamu Tezuka is named Tuberculosis. It tells the tale of a boy and his uncle who shrink to microscopic scale to fight the disease inside a child's body.[34]
See also
References
- ^ a b Lemlein, Rhoda F. (1981). "Influence Of Tuberculosis On The Work Of Visual Artists: Several Prominent Examples". Leonardo. 14 (2): 114–11. JSTOR 1574402.
- ^ a b Lawlor, C. (2006). Consumption and Literature: The Making of the Romantic Disease. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 215. ISBN 978-0-230-62574-7.
- ^ a b "About Chopin's illness". Icons of Europe. Retrieved 11 June 2017.
- ^ a b Rogal, Samuel J. (1997). A William Somerset Maugham Encyclopedia. Greenwood Publishing. p. 245. ISBN 978-0-313-29916-2.
- ^ a b "Tuberculosis (whole issue)". Journal of the American Medical Association. 293 (22): cover. 8 June 2005.
- ^ Wilsey, Ashley M. (May 2012). "'Half in Love with Easeful Death:' Tuberculosis in Literature". Humanities Capstone Projects (PhD Thesis), Pacific University.
- ^ a b c d e Morens, David M. (November 2002). "At the Deathbed of Consumptive Art". Emerging Infectious Diseases. 8 (11): 1353–1358. doi:10.3201/eid0811.020549.
- ^ "What's "Consumption," and Why Did It Kill Nicole Kidman?". Slate. 5 June 2001.
- ^ Hinden, Michael (1990). "The Pharmacology of 'Long Day's Journey Into Night'". The Eugene O'Neill Review. 14 (1/2): 47–51.
- ^ O'Connor, Terry (2016). Tuberculosis:Overview. Academic Press. p. 241. ISBN 978-0-12-803708-9.
{{cite book}}
:|work=
ignored (help) - ^ Lawlor, Clark. "Katherine Byrne, Tuberculosis and the Victorian Literary Imagination". British Society for Literature and Science. Retrieved 11 June 2017.
- ^ Byrne, Katherine (2011). Tuberculosis and the Victorian Literary Imagination. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-107-67280-2.
- ^ a b c d e f g "Pulmonary Tuberculosis/In Literature and Art". McMaster University History of Diseases. Retrieved 9 June 2017.
- ^ "The Rack by A. E. Ellis". Kirkus Reviews. Retrieved 12 June 2017.
- ^ Shriver, Lionel (15 March 2008). "A languorous novel of tuberculosis". The Daily Telegraph.
- ^ Hill, Susan (October 2016). "Cries and whispers in the TB sanitorium". The Spectator.
- ^ Butts, Heather M. (October 2006). "Movie Reviews "The Constant Gardener"" (PDF). Journal of the National Medical Association. 98 (10): 1717.
- ^ Lefebvre, Benjamin, ed. (2015). "Anne of the Island (1915)". The L. M. Montgomery Reader. Vol. 3. University of Toronto Press. pp. 155–171. ISBN 978-1-442-64493-9.
- ^ "Upton Sinclair Hits His Readers in the Stomach". History Matters. Retrieved 12 June 2017. Quote is from Chapter 9 of the novel.
- ^ McKibbin, Ross (2008). "Politics and the Medical Hero: A.J. Cronin's The Citadel". English History Review. 123 (502): 651–678.
- ^ Dougary, Ginny (3 July 1999). "Books: The afterlife of a politician". The Independent.
- ^ Phelan, James (2005). Living to Tell about it: A Rhetoric and Ethics of Character Narration. Cornell University Press. p. 71. ISBN 0-8014-8928-8.
- ^ MacDonald, Betty. "The Plague and I". University of Washington Press. Retrieved 12 June 2017.
- ^ a b Corliss, Richard (22 December 2008). "Top 10 Worst Christmas Movies". Time.
'If you don't cry when Bing Crosby tells Ingrid Bergman she has tuberculosis', Joseph McBride wrote in 1973, 'I never want to meet you, and that's that.'
- ^ "Drunken Angel. Akira Kurosawa". Criterion. Retrieved 12 June 2017.
- ^ Edmundson-Cornell, Harry (9 March 2015). "Blind Swordfighting and Consumption: The Tale of Zatoichi". Sequart Organization. Retrieved 13 June 2017.
- ^ Kornberg, Jim (2 May 2008). "TB or Not TB? Did Val Kilmer portray the lunger Doc Holliday accurately in 1993's Tombstone?". Truewest Magazine.
- ^ "Heavenly Creatures Comprehensive Storyform". Dramatica. Retrieved 12 June 2017.
- ^ a b c d "Tuberculosis Throughout History: The Arts" (PDF). USAID. Retrieved 12 June 2017.
- ^ "The Sick Child". Works from the collection. The Munch Museum. Retrieved 2006-05-08.
- ^ Bertman, Sandra L (19 November 2003). "Art Annotations: Munch, Edvard - The Sick Child". Literature, Arts, and Medicine Database. Archived from the original on 9 March 2005. Retrieved 2005-05-08.
- ^ "Recovery by Anonymous". American Visionary Art Museum. Retrieved 12 June 2017.
- ^ Thomson, Graeme (1 June 2016). "Van Morrison – 10 of the best". The Guardian.
- ^ "Osamu Tezuka, God of Manga". Legacy.com. 2011.