Whodunit

From Trump to Winnie the Pooh: how we use diagnosis as a narrative tool to make sense of dysfunction and deviance

Retrieved on: 
Monday, April 17, 2023

Being diagnosed with COVID makes sense of symptoms, determines what we should do about them, and shapes our collective responsibility to the community.

Key Points: 
  • Being diagnosed with COVID makes sense of symptoms, determines what we should do about them, and shapes our collective responsibility to the community.
  • You have symptoms, the doctor examines or tests you, you get a name for what ails you.
  • Even a diagnosis as seemingly clear-cut as COVID is more than just a label stuck to a virus.
  • Read more:
    COVID testing led to new techniques of disease diagnosis: progress mustn’t stop now

Diagnosis as storytelling

    • Diagnosis is so important to understanding our lives and those around us that it’s often applied outside of the health setting.
    • TV shows such as House use diagnostic mysteries to underpin plots – less Whodunit and more Whatisit.
    • A diagnosis is a story, in and of itself.
    • You have an infection of your lungs, probably caused by bacteria or a virus and possibly triggered by that cold you had last week.

Stories and deviance

    • Diagnostic stories are explanations of deviance.
    • By “deviance” we mean the sociological sense of the term: an inability to meet social expectations of behaviour, belief or experience.
    • To explain deviance, we often defer to diagnosis.
    • More than 150 scientific authors have thrown themselves at finding a diagnosis to explain his deviance.

Medicalising experiences

    • These stories say more about us, the diagnosers, and our contemporary views, than the lives of those they seek to describe.
    • By using diagnosis to explain people, we medicalise our experience of the world and shut down other avenues of explanation.
    • Just as explaining an imaginary character via diagnosis means we’ve lost faith in stories.

MysteryCaper Productions Announces Release of "Fleeting Memory": First in Planned Series of Full-Length MysteryCaper Games for iPad

Retrieved on: 
Monday, April 30, 2018

Featuring the art of illustrator Katerina Vamvasaki, the game follows the iconic characters of Young's series of "Fleeting" mysteries, all of which are framed within the unique MysteryCaper concept.

Key Points: 
  • Featuring the art of illustrator Katerina Vamvasaki, the game follows the iconic characters of Young's series of "Fleeting" mysteries, all of which are framed within the unique MysteryCaper concept.
  • Enescu Fleet is the eponymous semiretired protagonist from the "Enescu Fleet Mystery" series.
  • A private investigator who always happens to find himself in the most perplexing of circumstances, Fleet mystery stories are generally more refined than typical whodunits.
  • MysteryCaper Productions intends to translate the entire witty and fun "Fleeting" series of mystery adventures into games suitable for the iPhone and iPad.