This is the fourth and final blog in a series of responses by Life of Breath to the British Lung Foundation’s Battle for Breath report. Join us today at 12:00GMT on Twitter to discuss the issues …
Two Generations in the Asylum
Timothy Kelly’s extraordinary video has so much to contribute to arenas of inquiry within the medical humanities. These include: how and through which aesthetic forms we represent asylum histories and …
Medical breakthroughs missed because of pointless drug bans: David Nutt (The Conversation)
By David Nutt, Imperial College London. First published in The Conversation. In 1632 the Catholic Church convened a case against Galileo on the grounds that his work using the telescope to explore …
R. D. Laing’s Version of Asylum and its Cultural Appeal (Dr Adrian Chapman, Visiting Fellow at the MHRC, University of Glasgow)
This blog was previously posted on the University of Glasgow Medical Humanities Research Centre blog. We have reposted here with permission. The Wellcome Collection’s fascinating new London …
Working with Voices – Day 1, Durham University, 18 April 2016
Reposted from Hearing the Voice | Apr 26, 2016 | Conferences, Seminars, Lectures & Workshops, HtV Research Over the past three and a half years, Hearing the Voice has worked closely with the …
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Fiction as Therapy: Towards a Neo-Phenomenological Theory of the Novel
Re-blogged from Research English at Durham:In the first lecture of a new British Academy series on The Novel in English, Professor Patricia Waugh reflects upon the recent rise of institutions such as …
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