Doctors of John Ford: a compendium of science, ethics, humanistic heroism and idealism

Biomedical science has been present in cinema since its origins. With the beginning of micro and macrocinematography, scientists could resort to the telephoto lens, the microscope, and the endoscope to record various phenomena such as the biological functioning of the organs of a human being, as wel...

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Main Author: José Luis LÓPEZ FERNÁNDEZ
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ediciones Universidad de Salamanca 2016-04-01
Series:Revista de Medicina y Cine / Journal of Medicine and Movies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://revistas.usal.es/index.php/medicina_y_cine/article/view/13639
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spelling doaj-355276780ca74cf0b36f928a4c24de782020-11-25T03:57:28ZengEdiciones Universidad de SalamancaRevista de Medicina y Cine / Journal of Medicine and Movies1885-52102016-04-019416417712468Doctors of John Ford: a compendium of science, ethics, humanistic heroism and idealismJosé Luis LÓPEZ FERNÁNDEZ0Universidad de GranadaBiomedical science has been present in cinema since its origins. With the beginning of micro and macrocinematography, scientists could resort to the telephoto lens, the microscope, and the endoscope to record various phenomena such as the biological functioning of the organs of a human being, as well as accelerating or slowing a number of processes that otherwise would have turn out extremely complex to analyze. Since then, medicine has populated the screens for over a century of cinema, exhibiting characters with idiosyncrasies of very different nature: From the adoption of a purely scientific perspective opposed to faith designs (Dreyer or Tourneur) to those ‘doctors of terror’ that aspired, as stated in Clarke’s third law, to discover the limits of the possible by daring to explore the impossible (Frankenstein, Moreau, Mabuse or Caligari). In this article, we comparatively analyze the peculiarities of those physicians that have played a central role in John Ford’s work: Doctor Arrowsmith (1931), Doctor Bull (1933) and The prisoner of Shark Island (1936), among which their sense of deontologic ethics as well as their noticeable humanism are considered outstanding. We finally report on other minor roles that have also provided Ford’s cinema with doctors.https://revistas.usal.es/index.php/medicina_y_cine/article/view/13639humanismojohn fordmédico ruralinvestigación científicaéticadeontología médica
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author José Luis LÓPEZ FERNÁNDEZ
spellingShingle José Luis LÓPEZ FERNÁNDEZ
Doctors of John Ford: a compendium of science, ethics, humanistic heroism and idealism
Revista de Medicina y Cine / Journal of Medicine and Movies
humanismo
john ford
médico rural
investigación científica
ética
deontología médica
author_facet José Luis LÓPEZ FERNÁNDEZ
author_sort José Luis LÓPEZ FERNÁNDEZ
title Doctors of John Ford: a compendium of science, ethics, humanistic heroism and idealism
title_short Doctors of John Ford: a compendium of science, ethics, humanistic heroism and idealism
title_full Doctors of John Ford: a compendium of science, ethics, humanistic heroism and idealism
title_fullStr Doctors of John Ford: a compendium of science, ethics, humanistic heroism and idealism
title_full_unstemmed Doctors of John Ford: a compendium of science, ethics, humanistic heroism and idealism
title_sort doctors of john ford: a compendium of science, ethics, humanistic heroism and idealism
publisher Ediciones Universidad de Salamanca
series Revista de Medicina y Cine / Journal of Medicine and Movies
issn 1885-5210
publishDate 2016-04-01
description Biomedical science has been present in cinema since its origins. With the beginning of micro and macrocinematography, scientists could resort to the telephoto lens, the microscope, and the endoscope to record various phenomena such as the biological functioning of the organs of a human being, as well as accelerating or slowing a number of processes that otherwise would have turn out extremely complex to analyze. Since then, medicine has populated the screens for over a century of cinema, exhibiting characters with idiosyncrasies of very different nature: From the adoption of a purely scientific perspective opposed to faith designs (Dreyer or Tourneur) to those ‘doctors of terror’ that aspired, as stated in Clarke’s third law, to discover the limits of the possible by daring to explore the impossible (Frankenstein, Moreau, Mabuse or Caligari). In this article, we comparatively analyze the peculiarities of those physicians that have played a central role in John Ford’s work: Doctor Arrowsmith (1931), Doctor Bull (1933) and The prisoner of Shark Island (1936), among which their sense of deontologic ethics as well as their noticeable humanism are considered outstanding. We finally report on other minor roles that have also provided Ford’s cinema with doctors.
topic humanismo
john ford
médico rural
investigación científica
ética
deontología médica
url https://revistas.usal.es/index.php/medicina_y_cine/article/view/13639
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