For the first time, a book considers the doctor/patient relationship in
the long period and from a broad geographical perspective. Historians,
anthropologists and doctors reflect on the factors that, from the
Classical age until the present, have altered the care relationship and
the power relations embedded within it. The book also highlights that
communication and narration, understood as constitutive aspects of care,
are the elements which link the past to the present. From the encounter
between religion and medicine to the centuries-long struggle between
doctors and patients in defence of their respective positions, from
medical dramas to efforts to humanize medicine, the book describes the
doctor/patient relationship in all its cultural, transnational and
transtemporal dimensions.