エピソード

  • Episode 25 - Decolonizing our practices /w Dr Arya Thampuran and Prof Sarah de Leeuw
    2024/10/29

    Co-hosts Ian Sabroe and Dieter Declercq talk with Dr Arya Thampuran and Prof Sarah de Leeuw about decolonizing our practices. Key themes include: decolonial practice in academic spaces (non-extractive methodologies and representational labour); capitalism and extractive decontextualization; depoliticization of indigenous knowledges and practices; feminist queer-informed anti-colonial methodologies; critical poetics; medical education; and rural, remote, northern, and marginalized geographies.


    Dr Arya Thampuran is an Assistant Professor at the Institute for Medical Humanities, Durham University and co-lead of the Black Health and the Humanities Network in her day job, and a yoga instructor pre-sunrise/post-sunset. These roles capture her interests in mental health and healing, engaging with communal knowledges and practices around wellbeing. Her work is broadly situated at the intersection of the medical humanities and critical race studies; she is interested in how creative practitioners in contemporary African diasporic contexts express distress and healing, in ways that re-script prevailing psychiatric narratives of illness and wellness. Principally, her work is committed to a decolonial and intersectional approach.

    Sarah de Leeuw, a Professor and Canada Research Chair (Humanities and Health Inequities) with the Northern Medical Program (a distributed site of UBC’s Faculty of Medicine) is an award-winning researcher, creative writer (poetry and literary non-fiction), and multidisciplinary scholar studying why some people and places have better health than others. Trained as a historical-cultural geographer, de Leeuw’s research, activism, and creative practices have for more than 30 years focused on anticolonial, feminist, and queer-informed understandings of overlooked people, communities, and geographies. She grew up in Haida Gwaii and Terrace (Kitsumkalum territory) and now divides her time between Lheidli T’enneh/Dakelh Territory (Prince George) and Syilx Territory (Okanagan Centre).

    続きを読む 一部表示
    51 分
  • Episode 24 - Science fiction /w Dr Gavin Miller and Dr Anna McFarlane
    2023/12/07

    Co-hosts Ian Sabroe and Dieter Declercq talk with Dr Gavin Miller and Dr Anna McFarlane about their work on science fiction and the medical humanities. Gavin and Anna explain what science fiction has to offer the medical humanities, and how science fiction shapes our understanding of the future of healthcare, when the line between healthcare and biological enhancement could become increasingly blurry. They also share what they have learned in the process of editing The Edinburgh Companion to Science Fiction and the Medical Humanities with Dr Donna McCormack.

    Gavin Miller is Reader in Contemporary Literature and Medical Humanities at the University of Glasgow. His recent publications include Science Fiction and Psychology (LUP, 2020) and Miracles of Healing: Psychotherapy and Religion in Twentieth-Century Scotland (EUP, 2020). He is co-editor of The Edinburgh Companion to Science Fiction and the Medical Humanities, and his latest project is an investigation of UFO practices in post-war Scotland.

    Anna McFarlane is a Lecturer in Medical Humanities at the University of Leeds and author of the monograph Cyberpunk Culture and Psychology: Seeing Through the Mirrorshades (2021). Her current research was awarded a British Academy Postdoctoral Fellowship and focuses on traumatic pregnancy and its expression in fantastika. She is the co-editor of The Routledge Companion to Cyberpunk Culture, Fifty Key Figures in Cyberpunk Culture, and the forthcoming Edinburgh Companion to Science Fiction and the Medical Humanities.

    続きを読む 一部表示
    50 分
  • Episode 23 - Writing and personal stories /w Prof Anne Whitehead and Dr Jennifer H Pien
    2023/10/25

    Co-hosts Ian Sabroe and Dieter Declercq talk with Anne and Jenn about writing and personal stories in the context of medical and health humanities. Anne discusses how she combined the personal and the critical in writing her monograph Relating Suicide: A Personal and Critical Reflection. Jenn shares her experience of how care providers can integrate creative practices with healthcare and how such practices may support well-being.

    Prof Anne Whitehead is Professor of Modern and Contemporary Literature at Newcastle University UK. She was a co-editor of the Edinburgh Companion to the Critical Medical Humanities (Edinburgh University Press, 2016) and has recently published the monographs Medicine and Empathy in Contemporary British Fiction (Edinburgh University Press, 2017) and Relating Suicide: A Personal and Critical Reflection (Bloomsbury Academic, 2023).

    Jennifer H Pien is a Clinical Associate Professor at Stanford University in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences and is the Director of The Pegasus Physician Writers and Editor-in-Chief of The Pegasus Review. Her interests include physician well-being and the intersection of creative writing and medicine. Sea of Souls, her forthcoming novel, is represented by Lisa Grubka, United Talent Agency.

    続きを読む 一部表示
    52 分
  • Episode 22 - Chinese Medical Humanities /w Prof Guo Liping and Prof Vivienne Lo
    2023/09/25

    Co-hosts Ian Sabroe and Dieter Declercq talk with Prof Guo Liping and Prof Vivienne Lo about the cross-cultural medical and health humanities and their collaborative work on film and the Chinese Medical Humanities.

    Prof Guo Liping is Professor of English, Director, Centre for Narrative Medicine of Peking University Health Science Centre, Vice Dean, School of Health Humanities, Peking University. Her research interests include narrative medicine and medical humanities education. She’s vice editor-in-chief of the Chinese journal of Narrative Medicine.

    Prof Vivienne Lo is a Professor in the department of History and the convenor of the UCL China Centre for Health and Humanity. She also teaches the Ancient and Medieval history of China and has specialist modules in the History of Asian Medicine and Classical Chinese medicine at BSc and MA. Vivienne's core research concerns the social and cultural origins of acupuncture, therapeutic exercise, and food and medicine. She translates and analyses manuscript material from Early and Medieval China, and publishes on the transmission of scientific knowledge along the so-called Silk Roads. She has a long-term interest in visual cultures of medicine and healthcare. Current projects include a history of nutrition in China.

    続きを読む 一部表示
    55 分
  • Episode 21 - Illness narratives /w Dr Michelle Chiang
    2023/06/26

    Co-hosts Ian Sabroe and Dieter Declercq talk with Dr Michelle Chiang about her work on the value of illness stories, and how they could potentially inform or challenge our existing understanding of health, illness and dying. Michelle discusses her experience as a literary scholar and a medical humanities researcher in the Singapore research landscape, which is still trying to wrap its head around medical humanities as an interdisciplinary and collaborative field of inquiry.

    Dr Michelle Chiang is an Assistant Professor of English at Nanyang Technological University (NTU) and the coordinator of NTU's Medical Humanities Research Cluster. Her literary research intersects with her medical humanities interests in narratives of loss: the loss of physical control, the witnessing of loss, and the experience of dying. She is the principal investigator of a Ministry of Education (Singapore) funded research project Medical Humanities Approach to the Value of Patient Stories and Narrative Ethics.

    続きを読む 一部表示
    49 分
  • Episode 20 - Critical disability studies /w Prof Dan Goodley and Dr Kirsty Liddiard
    2023/04/04

    Co-hosts Ian Sabroe and Dieter Declercq talk with Professor Dan Goodley and Dr Kirsty Liddiard about the contributions of critical disability studies to the medical humanities, including the ‘absent presence’ of disability in medical humanities. Dan and Kirsty advocate for a paradigm shift that centres disability as the driving subject of inquiry and discuss proposed programmes of research, including ‘Disability Matters’ and ‘A new cultural politics of breathing’.

    Prof Dan Goodley is Professor of Disability Studies and Education in the School of Education and co-director of iHuman; the interdisciplinary institute for the study of the human. Dan is interested in theorising and challenging the conditions of disablism (the social, political, cultural and psycho-emotional exclusion of people with physical, sensory and/or cognitive impairments) and ableism (the contemporary ideals on which the able, autonomous, productive citizen is based). He draws on ideas from critical psychology, medical sociology, medical humanities, philosophy, sociology and education.

    Dr Kirsty Liddiard is a Senior Research Fellow in the School of Education and theme co-leader in iHuman at the University of Sheffield. She is the author of The Intimate Lives of Disabled People (2018, Routledge) and co-editor of The Palgrave Handbook of Disabled Children’s Childhood Studies (2018, Palgrave) with Tillie Curran and Katherine Runswick-Cole. She is co-editor of Being Human in Covid-19 (2022, Bristol University Press) with Warren Pearce, Paul Martin and Stevie de Saille and a co-author of Living Life to the Fullest: Disability, Youth and Voice (2022, Emerald). Her research explores disability, childhood and youth. She tweets @kirstyliddiard1.

    続きを読む 一部表示
    52 分
  • Episode 19 - Medicine and humanities /w Dr Brandy Schillace
    2023/02/21

    Co-hosts Ian Sabroe and Dieter Declercq talk with Dr Brandy Schillace about medicine and its engagement with the humanities. This episode explores how the humanities engage and reflect critically upon the practices of health, as well as shape conversation and lead the way for social justice and change. Brandy also discusses the new global initiatives launched by BMJ’s Medical Humanities.

    Dr. Brandy Schillace (skil-AH-chay) is a critically acclaimed author, historian, and editor in chief of BMJ’s Medical Humanities Journal. Her recent book, Mr. Humble and Dr. Butcher – described by the New York Times as a “macabre delight” – explores Cold War medicine, bioethics, and transplant science. Dr. Schillace’s next book, The Intermediaries, will tell the forgotten, daring history of the interwar Institute of Sexology in Berlin: trans activists, the first gender affirming surgeries, and the fight for LGBTQ rights in the shadow of the Nazi Third Reich. She writes regularly for WIRED, Scientific American, Globe and Mail, WSJ Books, and Medium. Her YouTube series, Peculiar Book Club, features livestreamed chats with bestselling authors of unusual nonfiction, from Lindsey Fitzharris and Mary Roach to Carl Zimmer and Deborah Blum. Dr. Schillace has appeared on Travel Channel’s Mysteries at the Museum, NPR’s Here and Now, and the History Channel.

    続きを読む 一部表示
    50 分
  • Episode 18 - Death and dying /w Prof Karla FC Holloway and Dr Bill Hoy
    2023/01/17

    Co-hosts Ian Sabroe and Dieter Declercq talk with Karla and Bill on the topic of death and dying. This episode explores the complex terrain of race and gender at the intersection of literature, law and bioethics, alongside clinical perspectives on the transformative power of bereavement and the social benefits of funeral ceremonies.

    Professor Karla FC Holloway is James B. Duke Emerita Professor of English, African-American Studies, and Professor of Law at Duke University. She’s the author of Passed On: African American Mourning Stories. Her classrooms and scholarship focused on literature, law, and bioethics. She has been a member of the Advisory Bioethics Board of the Greenwall Scholars Bioethics Fellowship and served as a national and international speaker on matters of Black Cultural Studies. Karla FC Holloway’s most recent novel, Gone Missing in Harlem (Triquarterly, 2021) was awarded a Publisher’s Weekly Starred ⭐️ Review (!) and joined her Harlem Renaissance series that began with A Death in Harlem (2019). Her 3rd novel, The Thursday Lady, is nearing completion.

    Dr. William G. (Bill) Hoy is Clinical Professor of Medical Humanities at Baylor. He is an experienced hospice/palliative care counselor with more than 35 years of experience caring for the dying and bereaved. Dr. Hoy is widely regarded as an authority on the role of social support in death, dying and grief and his experience includes more than 20 years leading bereavement and pastoral care programs in hospice care. Though primarily a bedside clinician, Dr. Hoy has authored more than 125 articles and book chapters as well as six books, including Do Funerals Matter? (Routledge, 2013), Bereavement Groups and the Role of Social Support (Routledge, 2016) and Finding Meaning in Funerals (Routledge, expected 2024).

    続きを読む 一部表示
    53 分