Structure/Length: 2 parts, 9 chapters, prologue, and epilogue; approximately 228 pages; approximately 5 hours, 35 minutes on audio
Central Concern:When Breath Becomes Air chronicles the life of neurosurgeon Paul Kalanithi after he is diagnosed with stage IV lung cancer at the age of 36. The memoir reflects on his transformation from a medical student to a neurosurgeon dealing with life’s fragility to a patient grappling with his own mortality. Kalanithi shares his insights on the relationship between doctor and patient, the challenges of facing death, and what makes life meaningful. The narrative explores identity, the human condition, and what it means to live a meaningful life.
Potential Sensitivity Issues: Discussions of terminal illness, death, and dying; personal and emotional reflections on mortality and the experience of facing cancer
Paul Kalanithi, Author
Bio: Born 1977; died 2015; Indian American neurosurgeon and writer; earned degrees in English literature, human biology, and medicine from Stanford University and Cambridge University; wrote When Breath Becomes Air in the last year of his life
Awards: Pulitzer Prize Finalist in Biography (2017)
CENTRAL THEMESconnected and noted throughout this Teaching Guide:
The Meaning of Death
Books and Literature
The Patient-Doctor Dichotomy
The Future
STUDY OBJECTIVES: In accomplishing the components of this Teaching Guide, students will:
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