Showing posts with label medical humanities. Show all posts
Showing posts with label medical humanities. Show all posts

Friday, 8 March 2013

Sketches for Fragile Narratives, 2011

For my fragile narratives piece, I spent time in residential homes and with users of Age UK Day services in Cheltenham sketching people whilst they told me anecdotes from their past.

I really enjoyed this process, some of the stories, such as the lady who worked on the Enigma project in Bletchley park during the second world war, and the man who was an engineer who designed aeroplanes, were absolutely fascinating and unexpected.

Below are some of the sketches produced. 































Sunday, 3 March 2013

Artist Statement for Medicine Unboxed 2012


I am interested in the concept of ‘the origin of belief’. How are beliefs formed? Are our beliefs individual to us, or influenced by social and cultural factors surrounding us?
 
 
I read that “belief is a mental architecture of how we interpret the world”.

This made me think of formal structures, the organisation of cells that make up the intricate civilisation of tissues which house our thoughts. Although the brain of the doctor would look identical to that of the patient under the microscope, what is it that causes us to adopt different belief systems and thought processes? We all share the same neuroanatomy, but no two minds are identical.

 
Historical references have been documented concerning the discoveries that neuroscientists have made, connecting the hard-wired organisational structure of the brain with the intangible beliefs that we humans hold. For hundreds of years, there have been documented cases of people who have physically damaged their brain through illness or trauma, which has resulted altered behaviour, and possessing very specific delusions, beliefs held with strong conviction despite superior evidence to the contrary. This anecdotal evidence is now being confirmed with the development of science and technology. A method of taking pictures of the human brain working, known as functional neuroimaging, shows us the brain lighting up like a Christmas tree when the subject is experiencing different emotions, allowing us to actually see wherein the brain these intangible thoughts originate from within this organ.




“Beliefs are mental objects, in the sense that they are embedded in the brain”.



I wanted to work with this idea of functional imaging, representing the origins of belief. I based the images on real MRI scans that I am used to seeing everyday in a professional capacity, using images of the brain where it had been ‘cut’ into interesting sections which are not easily recognisable. The hard, cold, science of anatomy and pathology, have been contrasted with ancient techniques and muted colours to produce the ethereal quality of the images of the mind in action. The canvases are layered with gesso to incorporate texture. The palette is calm and neutral, reminding me of the transient nature of dust; how our delicate and fragile beliefs could fade with time.

Conference 19-20th September 2013. Malady and Mortality: Illness, Disease and Death literary and visual culture conference



Keynote Speakers: Professor Tony Walter, Centre for Death, University of Bath; Professor Alan Bleakley, Peninsula College of Medicine and Dentistry
Papers are invited on the following topics:
  • Health, Well Being and Environment
  • History of Medicine
  • Public Health and Medicine
  • Disease and Subjectivity
  • Disability and Agency
  • The Body in Pain
  • Palliative Care
  • Illness and Digital Technologies
  • Narrative, e-Narratives and Memory
  • Medical Intervention and Patient Testimony
  • Communication and Patient Networks
  • Medical Identities and Medical Gatekeepers
  • Sustainability, Quality of Life and Euthanasia
  • State Intervention and Legal Decisions
  • Artes Moriendi and Privacy Definitions of Death
  • Rights and Ownership
  • Grief and Mourning
Please send abstracts (200 words max) to Dr Helen Thomas, with subject header ‘Malady and Mortality Conference’ by 1st May 2013.

Medicine Unboxed 2012

Highlights from Medicine Unboxed 2012, Parabola Arts Centre, Cheltenham.
 

 
 
For more soundclips and videos from the event, go to https://itunes.apple.com/gb/podcast/medicineunboxed/id586049615?mt=2
 
 
 


Poet in the City, March 4th 2013

Sam Guglani and Jo Shapcott talking about poetry and medicine ahead of the Poet in the City event on 4 March


Tuesday, 3 April 2012

Care and Cure: Diseases, Disabilities and Therapies. Medical Humanities conference, Swansea, 14-15 June 2012

Care and Cure: Symposium by the Sea 2012
 This conference looks quite good, and only down the road...
The 6th annual Symposium by the Sea, hosted by MEMO at Swansea University, will take place on June 14-15 2012 in the College of Arts and Humanities. Themes to be considered at this event will include: writing about health and disease; representing illness and disability in texts and images; defining and living with disability; medical education and medical practitioners; hospitals; surgery; curing the soul; pharmacology.
Key to the conference discussions will be the transitions visible in the evidence between the medieval and early-modern periods, such as the increased licensing and control of medical practice and the concomitant marginalization of practitioners whose skills and abilities (and gender) excluded them from the new and self-conscious profession.
The conference will draw upon the existing strength of research into the medical humanities at Swansea, and will combine local expertise with the invited contributions of leading scholars in the field, including Professors Monica Green (Arizona State University) and Peter Biller (University of York). A key aim of the conference is to include junior and postgraduate researchers, for whom a series of workshops will be organised on day one of the conference, culminating in three postgraduate papers by new researchers in the area of medical humanities.

For more info check it out here.