Wayne Wild
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Wayne Wild grew up in New York City and was a pre-med and English major at Columbia University in the ’60s, and part of the 1968 student uprising there. He went on to medical school at Columbia Presbyterian, followed by residency and fellowships in medicine in Boston, and practiced as an internist and gastroenterologist from 1978 to 1993 in the Boston area. Then he decided to go back to school and do something he had loved back in his college days. So he got a Ph.D. in English and American literature at Brandeis University, focusing on 18th-century English literature and 18th-century medicine, especially the rhetoric used by physicians and patients. His book on that subject is called Medicine-by-Post.
Wild has been at Berklee as an associate professor since 2000 and developed two original courses. The first he calls Liberating Aesthetics, which considers aesthetics from the artists' point of view (rather than philosophers), and he published a book to go with it called Liberating Aesthetics: For the Aspiring Artist and the Inspired Audience. More recently, he developed a course called Internal and External Landscapes, which is about how all our identities correspond to landscapes we have experienced throughout life, from home and nature to movies. For fall 2023, he added a new 111 level course called, Personal Identities: Personal Essay, Memoir, Poetry and Lyrics, and Through Fiction. The course explores various forms of self-expression, with attention to how the artist transforms identity within these forms, including fictive identities.
- Medical director at Tufts Health Plan
- Publications include Medicine-by-Post: The Changing Voice of Illness in Eighteenth-Century British Consultation Letters and Literature (2006); "Due Preparations: Defoe and Dr. Mead and the Threat of Plague" in Liberating Medicine, 1720–1835 (2009), and Liberating Aesthetics: For the Aspiring Artist and the Inspired Audience (Kendall-Hunt, 2015), which is based on a Berklee course on aesthetics not as philosophy, but from the point of view of poets and other artists, intended for budding artists
- Presented talk entitled the Rhetorical Origins of Modern Medical Ethics in Enlightenment Scotland, on February 6, 2014, at the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science in Berlin
- Published in Scottish Medicine and Literary Culture, 1726–1832 (2014)