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Geographies of medical and health humanities: A cross-disciplinary conversation

De Leeuw, Sarah, Donovan, Courtney, Shafenacker, Nicole, Kearns, Robin, Neuwelt, Pat, Merill Squier, Susan, McGeachen, Cheryl, Parr, Hester, Frank, Arthur W., Coyle, Lindsay-Ann, Atkinson, Sarah, El-Hadi, Nehal, Shklanka, Karen, Shooner, Caroline, Beljaars, Diana and Anderson, Jonathan ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6052-5154 2018. Geographies of medical and health humanities: A cross-disciplinary conversation. GeoHumanities 4 (2) , pp. 285-334. 10.1080/2373566X.2018.1518081

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Abstract

In recent years, both within and beyond academic and clinical spheres, medical and health humanities have become increasingly influential. Drawing from interdisciplinary fields in the humanities, social sciences, and the arts, medical and health humanities present unique lenses for considering nuanced spaces and lived experiences of health and health care; they also help challenge traditional ways that medicine and health care are understood and practiced. This collection brings together practitioners and theorists working broadly in medical health humanities, asking them both to consider their work as temporally and spatially located and to position their practices in conversation with a growing uptake of humanities methods and methodologies in other disciplines. The work of nine contributors uses these themes as a starting point for thinking about the future of medical health humanities in new and potentially even more productive ways.

Item Type: Article
Date Type: Publication
Status: Published
Schools: Geography and Planning (GEOPL)
Additional Information: Beljaars and Anderson's contribution is entitled 'Tourette Syndrome through the eye of the beholder' pp. 324-329.
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
ISSN: 2373-566X
Date of First Compliant Deposit: 12 October 2018
Date of Acceptance: 18 August 2018
Last Modified: 05 May 2023 17:44
URI: https://orca.cardiff.ac.uk/id/eprint/114640

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