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These two provocative books look at women, men, and their roles and relations in our health care system. The message in both cases is that the practice of medicine and our thinking about medicine and ethics need revision from a feminist perspective. Stylistically, however, the two accounts differ dramatically, illustrating how the medium can indeed become the message, sometimes in ways that the author never intended.
The title of her book notwithstanding, Susan Sherwin provides a patient, minimally strident, yet fully formed feminist critique of medical ethics and a creative exposition of the improvements possible within a feminist ethics of
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