Blog

‘Trauma’: A multidisciplinary workshop

On November 29th, 2023, the EPIC project and the Bristol Centre for Health Humanities and Science (CHHS) convened a multidisciplinary, collaborative workshop involving health practitioners, academic researchers, and students to explore lived experiences of trauma. More specifically, the workshop delved into trauma as experienced by clinicians, their patients, and marginalised or vulnerable societal groups, including children, women, and people from socioeconomically disadvantaged populations. To explore these experiences, we were joined by five speakers with expertise in trauma-related research.

In a timely talk exploring childhood trauma, Dr. Maya Mukamel explained how the ambiguous legal and political status of children in some countries renders them susceptible to human rights violations and various moral and epistemic harms. This was followed by an exploration of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in Virginia Woolf’s Mrs. Dalloway, where Dr. Elizabeth Gourd highlighted the trauma that can occur during and in the aftermath of war. This fuelled discussion about post-World War II Britain, characterised by enduring scars and a ‘wilful determination for closure.’

Other talks explored how trauma is encountered in healthcare and medical education. In a talk titled ‘The Healing Paradox,’ Prof. Louise Younie explored the role of ‘creative inquiry’ using artistic practices to equip clinicians with conceptual tools for navigating emotional complexities. She also cautioned against resilience-focused medical discourses, which might inadvertently lead to perfectionism as well as feelings of shame and inadequacy. Alternatively, Prof. Younie proposed an approach centred around ‘flourishing’ and finding creative pathways to integrate trauma-informed care into mainstream medical education.

Echoing these ideas, Dr. Jonathon Tomlinson also stressed the significance of embracing holistic patient perspectives, with greater consideration for intersectionality, lived experience and personal histories. Building on this, he explained that trauma typically escapes diagnosis, manifesting in various chronic and acute illnesses, posing challenges for patients.

Concluding the sessions, Kate Binnie, a music therapist, PhD student, and palliative care practitioner, described the relationship between lived experiences involving breathlessness, trauma, and epistemic injustice. In particular, Kate explained how a body-mind approach, employing song and breathwork practices, can help alleviate potentially traumatic experiences of breathlessness for individuals approaching the end of life.

Collectively, these discussions underscored the interconnectedness of trauma and epistemic injustice, particularly how interactions with clinicians can either alleviate or exacerbate trauma. The speakers unanimously emphasised the need for shared concepts and practices to address trauma experiences, benefiting both healthcare practitioners and their patients.

(Blog by Kathryn Body, CHHS PGR Representative)

Reflecting on ‘BODIES’: an interdisciplinary conference exploring health and healthcare

This blog post recalls and reviews one of the summer’s main events supported by CHHS. On 26 June 2023, a collaboration between Great Western Hospitals and Medicine 360, ‘Bodies’ bought together healthcare professionals, medical students, academics and members of the public to explore interdisciplinary approaches to health and healthcare. A combination of talks, panel discussions, poetry readings, animations, and artworks provided opportunities to reflect on the relationship we as human beings have with our own bodies, other people’s bodies and the role of healthcare within this.

The Bad Doctor
Dr. Ian Williams author of The Bad Doctor and The Lady Doctor introduced ‘Graphic Medicine’ an online platform using art, humour and wit to portray different scenarios encountered in healthcare and in his own life as a medical doctor. As a concept, Williams defines graphic medicine as ‘the intersection between the medium of comics and the discourse of healthcare’ providing a careful, yet powerful medium for communicating some of the issues facing clinicians, patients and the NHS. Williams’s work uses comics to educate, empathise and normalise aspects of our lived experience as either patients or healthcare professionals, helping navigate complex topics such as mental health and perceived failure.

The power of storytelling, narrative and visual art was also bought to the fore by Bristol City Poet, Kat Lyons, whose spoken word performance and award-winning animation Duvet Days tells of her struggles with paranoid anxiety following premature menopause. Kat’s work also provides avenues for exploring topics such as mental health, age, and identity, overcoming communication barriers and highlighting the importance of sharing lived experience.

Grief, Death and Donation
The second half of the day opened with a panel discussion on grief by Prof. Lesel Dawson, Prof. Lucy Selman and Prof. Mark Taubert chaired by Dr. Rachel Clarke. This discussion was inspired, in part by the ‘Good Grief Festival’ a community founded by Prof. Lucy Selman aimed at providing people experiencing grief with ‘solace and support through storytelling’. Amongst other things, one of the topics raised was “grief hierarchies” specifically, the idea that some grief experiences are more socially acceptable than others. For example, the grief that often follows miscarriage or still birth was a topic that one of the panellists, drawing on her own lived experience, felt is sometimes associated with a diminished sense of significance, social stigma and taboo. These themes were further amplified by artworks by Clare Clark, Bristol-based conceptual artist whose delicate works were displayed in the Great Hall. Claire’s work aims at breaking down barriers in public discourse surrounding miscarriage and creating awareness of the unresolved pain it can involve.

The significance of normalising discussions about grief, death and dying was also bought to the fore in another talk, ‘The Making of My Dead Body’. The discussion led by anatomist and PhD student, Dayna Stone alongside anatomy administrator Laura Arnold, who told the heartfelt story behind ‘My Dead Body’ a Channel 4 production about Toni Crews, a young woman who donated her body for medical research and public dissection. The talk disclosed a deep sense of connection and gratitude towards Toni, her donation, and its educational significance for medical students, scientific researchers, and members of the public.

Wearable artworks
In another talk, artist and founder of ‘The Alternative Limb Project’ Sophie De Oliveira Barata gave an inspiring talk about her journey from sculptor to designer of wearable art pieces. Sophie works closely with prosthetists and a vast range of clients, including paralympic athletes, musicians, models, performing artists and veterans, to create limbs that enable people to express their individuality and feel empowered. In her talk, Sophie told the story of a young girl who she continuously worked with post-injury to design an age-appropriate limb reflecting her personality and creativity.

Overall, these talks in addition to many others provided new insight into a range of topics surrounding the body and our lived experience of it. A reoccurring theme in each seemed to be a push for acceptance of the body and of ourselves as fundamentally fallible, vulnerable beings. Considering this shared ambition, what many of the talks, performances, and exhibitions demonstrate is the crucial role the arts and humanities can play in helping people to develop new perspectives and navigate complex situations.

(Blog by Kathryn Body, CHHS PGR Representative)

Modernist Fiction and the Health Humanities 06.12.23

Centre for Health, Humanities, and Science, University of Bristol

Wednesday 6 December, 2:00 – 3:30pm (online)

Registration: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/modernist-fiction-and-the-health-humanities-6-december-2023-tickets-723280811377?aff=oddtdtcreator

Organiser: Doug Battersby (Bristol)

 

Abstracts

Stefanie Heine (Copenhagen) and Arthur Rose (Exeter) — Metabolising Marcel Proust’s Madeleine

Of all the scenes involving mémoire involuntaire in Marcel Proust’s A la recherche du temps perdu, that of the madeleine is the most famous. Recalled in the closing pages of the work’s opening chapter, it is the taste of a few crumbs of madeleine in tea that will permit the whole of the narrator’s childhood to spring into being. Readings of this scene have traditionally focussed on the madeleine as a vehicle, a necessary, yet arbitrary, trigger for Marcel’s memory. In recent Food Studies criticism, the madeleine itself has received attention. In both accounts, what is often elided is the intricate process, recounted by Proust, whereby the combination of tea and crumb is tested for the as yet undecided effect it creates in his narrator. In this paper, we adopt an alternative approach, instead close reading the passage for the process of transformation that it describes. Proust’s encounter with the madeleine, we argue, lends itself to being read as metabolic: more concerned with process than either its stimulus or the memories this evokes. By recalling Proust’s experiments with the combination of tea and madeleine, we aim to attend once more to Proust’s narrative processes, rather than the memories he is so often praised for or the objects these evoke.

 

Derek Ryan (Kent) — The Modernist Oesophagus in James Joyce’s Ulysses

Literature’s most famous oesophagus appears as a joke. In Mark Twain’s A Double Barrelled Detective Story (1902) we read, among an innocuous description of early autumn, that ‘far in the empty sky a solitary oesophagus slept upon motionless wing’. Upon its publication, the line prompted many letters from readers baffled by the insertion of this word: what did it mean? Why was it in the sky? Was it supposed to be a kind of bird (a swallow or gull[et] perhaps)? But the alimentary canal connecting the throat to the stomach does have a more significant location in early-twentieth-century literature. In the schema James Joyce provided for Ulysses (1922), the novel’s eighth episode, ‘Lestrygonians’, is given the ‘organ’ of ‘oesophagus’ and the ‘technic’ of ‘peristalsis’. In this paper, I examine ‘Lestrygonians’ to ask what role the oesophagus plays in Joyce’s imaginative exploration of the digestive tract. While critics read the episode’s language of digestion as a signpost for its Homeric parallel, a metaphor for the modern city, a study of meat-eating virility, or a stylistic device for linguistic experimentation, they do so by assuming smooth passage into the gut (often citing, in the process, Frank Budgen’s recollection of Joyce remarking that ‘the stomach dominates’ in ‘Lestrygonians’). Focusing instead on images of mastication, obstruction, and regurgitation, I argue that the

episode’s thematic and aesthetic concerns rest on the disruption of peristaltic processes and a malfunctioning gullet – on what, in other words and in various senses, is hard to swallow.

 

Liz Barry (Warwick) — ‘Narrower and narrower would her bed be’: Ageing and Embodied Time in the Work of Virginia Woolf

This paper will consider the representation of ageing and time in the writing of Virginia Woolf, focusing on key scenes—a unit of time and narrative so richly conceived by Woolf—in her novels Mrs Dalloway, The Waves and The Years. It will draw out the complex and ambivalent attitude to getting older in Woolf’s writing, among her modernist contemporaries and in her historical moment. It will touch on the intersection of age and gender always already at play in her writing and her (as all of our) social experience. It will also think about the (sometimes) shapeless or sclerotic body in age as metaphor for various aspects of psychological and cognitive experience. Woolf often begins with the starting point of the skin as an expressive metonym of ageing—and as such a touchstone for desire, disgust, and value. She also depicts sleep in older age in terms of its potential link to death (symbolic and actual) and to abjection—but also to a form of renewal. Drawing on psychoanalytic, medical and philosophical frames of reference—as well as literary close reading—this paper will contribute to investigations of ageing in the contexts of both modernism and the health humanities.

 

Speaker Bios

Stefanie Heine is an assistant professor in the Department of Comparative Literature at the University of Copenhagen. She is the author of Visible Words and Chromatic Pulse. Virginia Woolf’s Writing, Impressionist Painting, Maurice Blanchot’s Image (Turia + Kand 2014) and Poetics of Breathing. Modern Literature’s Syncope (SUNY 2021), and editor of Mineral Poetics (Böhlau 2022).

Arthur Rose is a senior research fellow in the Department of English and Creative Writing at the University of Exeter. He is author of Asbestos–The Last Modernist Object (EUP 2022) and co-author, with Fred Cooper and Luna Dolezal, of COVID-19 and Shame: Political Emotions and Public Health in the UK (Bloomsbury 2023).

Derek Ryan is Senior Lecturer in Modernist Literature at the University of Kent, where his research and teaching focuses primarily on modernism, animal studies and critical theory. His most recent books are his monograph Bloomsbury, Beasts and British Modernist Literature (Cambridge UP, 2022) and edited collection The Cambridge Companion to Literature and Animals (Cambridge UP, 2023). He is currently Literature Subject Editor for the Routledge Encyclopedia of Modernism and Series Editor for Edinburgh UP’s Virginia Woolf – Variations.

Liz Barry is Professor of Modern Literature at the University of Warwick. She has published widely in modernist studies and health humanities, editing issues of the Journal of Beckett Studies and (with Laura Salisbury and Ulrika Maude) the Journal of Medical Humanities on Samuel Beckett, medicine and the mind. More recently, she edited the 2020 collection Literature and Ageing, and published on older age and literature in Textual Practice, Poetics Today and a number of other journals and collections. She is writing a monograph for Bloomsbury on ageing and the experience of time in modern literature and thought.

CHHS and ‘Sense and Sensations’ cluster Research Seminar: Professor Hannah Thompson

Professor Hannah Thompson joined the CHHS on 02/11/2022 to discuss ‘”Blindness Gain” and the Danger of Accessible Art’.

This talk used examples from 3 Parisian art galleries to argue for a new approach to the display and interpretation of art. Most large museums and galleries work hard to make a few pieces of art accessible to blind and partially blind beholders. My research shows that this kind of access can do more harm than good. Here, I will use my theory of “blindness gain” to suggest that more inclusive approaches, informed by the practice of ‘creative audio description’ are the best way to create properly inclusive gallery experiences for everyone.

 

CHHS Research Seminar: Dr Luis De Miranda

On Wednesday 5 October, CHHS welcomed our first speaker of the year, Dr Luis de Miranda. The seminar was chaired by Professor Ulrika Maude, the director of the CHHS.
Dr Luis de Miranda is a researcher at the Center for Medical Humanities at Uppsala University, Sweden, the initiator of the Philosophical Health International network (https://philosophical.health) and the author of a dozen books translated into various languages, including Being and Neonness (MIT Press). His talk was entitled ‘Sense-Making Interviews Looking at Elements of Philosophical Health: Introducing the New SMILE_PH Method through the Case of Spinal Cord Injury’.
He told us about his new semi-structured interviewing method SMILE_PH, an acronym for Sense-Making Interviews Looking at Elements of Philosophical Health. As well as explaining the theoretical underpinnings of his method (including work by Maurice Merleau-Ponty and other phenomenological thinkers), he described some interesting case studies based on a pilot study he conducted with people living with spinal cord injury (SCI). The SMILE_PH method progressively gathers phenomenological information about 1 – our bodily sense; 2 – our sense of self, 3 – our sense of belonging; 4 – our sense of the possible; 5 – our sense of purpose and 6 – our philosophical sense. Dr de Miranda explained that his main motivation is pragmatic: he wants to provide the recent philosophical health movement with a testable method and show that philosophically-oriented interviews are possible in a manner that can be reproduced, compared and used systematically with a population that has received no training in philosophy. It was fascinating to hear about the ways in which philosophy can enrich medicine, and vice versa.

CHHS and Philosophy Department Research Seminar: Dr Jamila Rodrigues

Dr Jamila Rodrigues joined the CHHS on June 14th to present a talk entitled ‘Finding IKIGAI during times of crisis’.

 

Abstract

Our ways of overcoming times of crisis critically depend on cultural ideas of living well since cultures conceptualise/experience well-being differently. This topic has raised interest in the social sciences, especially since the COVID-19 Pandemic. Rodrigues’ appeal is to understand how different people express well-being in the life settings in which they live. This talk focused on Japan, and the concept of ikigai (生き甲斐), translated as “a purpose in life” to address the question: how do Japanese people seem to balance well-being, life meaning, and joy in life during pandemic crisis? 

Firstly, Rodrigues drew from the Japanese participant’s narratives from a large-scale project, Experiences of Social Distancing during the COVID-19 Pandemic. She used Ikigai-9, a psychometric tool developed by Japanese scholars (Imai, Osada &Nishimura 2012), tested by scholars in the UK (Fido & Kotera 2019) to measure one’s reason for being through dimensions of emotions towards one’s life, one’s future, and the acknowledgment of one’s existence. Rodrigues proposed that ikigai is one way of looking at well-being from a cultural basis that helps people to make sense of their “being in the world” during times of crisis (i.e., COVID-19 Pandemic).

Secondly, Rodrigues presented the topic of her JSPS fellowship, which stems from the COVID-19 Pandemic Survey’s initial findings. The aim is to develop a framework that she calls “embodied ikigai,” based on cultural phenomenology (Csordas 1993), phenomenology of illness (Carel 2017), psychology (Kamiya 1966), and anthropology (Mathew 1996) studies on ikigai and Japan and cultural identity (Tanaka 2019). Rodrigues wishes to explore the idea that the gendered body can be understood as the subject of experience and that our bodies are the existential ground of self and culture. Focusing on ikigai as a bodily felt experience, Rodrigues wishes to clarify how Japanese women perceive ikigai as a cultural idea or motive in their lived experience through crisis.

 

Bio

Jamila Rodrigues is a postdoctoral researcher in the Embodied Cognitive Science Unit at OIST, where she contributes as a qualitative researcher to the COVID-19 pandemic experience. Rodrigues is a former dancer with extensive experience working as an anthropologist, doing ethnographic fieldwork in Europe, Africa, South America, and East Asia on embodiment, gender, religious studies, and selfhood expression (Rodrigues 2018). For her Master’s degree in Dance and Anthropology at the University of Cape Town, she received a Leverhulme Travel Abroad scholarship (2010-2012). She received the Vice Chancellor’s Scholarship for her DPhil in Anthropology and Islamic Ritual Studies at Roehampton University, UK (2014-2017). 

In 2020, Rodrigues was awarded a Great Sasakawa short trip scholarship to visit the International Research Centre for Japanese Studies (Kyoto), for which she also conducted preliminary fieldwork on Okinawan shaman’s (yuta) embodied ritual experience. Recently, Rodrigues was awarded a JSPS fellowship for her study on ikigai (生き甲斐), translated as “a purpose in life,” to analyse Japanese women’s narratives related to the role of the bodies in embodying ikigai during times of crisis.

CHHS Research Seminar: Dr Benjamin Smart

On June 1st, Dr Benjamin Smart joined CHHS members to discuss ‘How Covid-19 has brought to light the failure of One-Size-Fits-All approaches to public health’.

Abstract: Since late 2019, every country in the world has been battling the largest pandemic in a century. Covid-19 has infected nearly 500 million people worldwide, and killed 6 million of those (and the real figures for both deaths and infections are no doubt substantially higher). To combat the pandemic, nations put in place a variety of measures to slow the spread of the disease, including, in some cases, measures that all but shut down their economies (both formal and informal). This followed blanket advice from the World Health Organisation (WHO), which recommended strict lockdown policies on a global scale.

In this paper, Smart questioned the WHO recommendations. Evidence Based Public Health Policy guidelines emphasise the importance of cultural context when making policy decisions, and yet these considerations were largely ignored during the Covid-19 pandemic.

Countries were faced with a choice between more or less drastic measures to ‘flatten the curve’, but with a disease that rarely affected the young, one must wonder whether implementing measures that would inevitably lead to malnutrition and starvation for millions of people in Africa, as well as severely disrupting existing healthcare programmes on a continent where only 3% of the population are over 65, could have possibly been justified given the typical disease course of Covid-19 in the young.

Suppose you had a choice between two health policies, A and B. Policy A would result in the death of a lot of elderly people, and Policy B would result in the death of a lot of children, especially infants. Which would you choose?

Bio: Dr Benjamin Smart is an associate professor in philosophy. Prior to joining the University of Johannesburg in 2015 he lectured at The University of Birmingham (in the United Kingdom). He received his PhD from Nottingham University in 2012.

Smart’s research focuses on the metaphysics of laws and causation, and on the philosophy of medicine. He published a monograph entitled ‘Concepts and Causes in the Philosophy of Disease’ in 2016, and has numerous papers in highly ranked international philosophy journals. He has published articles on the metaphysics of least action principles, the problem of induction, the nature of fundamental properties, the philosophy of sport, and on the philosophy of health and disease.

Dr Smart believes that philosophical work in medicine can have a direct impact on society, and so also collaborates with academics in the medical sciences to address what some might call ‘real world problems’ in public health.

CHHS and English Department: Showcasing research at CHHS – a panel of flash papers

Members from the advisory board of the Centre for Health, Humanities and Science joined the English department to showcase their research on the 11th May 2022.

There was a panel of flash papers (followed by Q&A) to learn more about some of the research projects at the intersection of literature and medicine.

  • Cleo Hanaway-Oakley, ‘James Joyce and Non-normative Vision: Re-viewing the Blind Bard’
  • Abby Ashley, ‘Parenting whilst Autistic: Reclaiming ‘Wild’ Identities in (M)otherhood’
  • Maria Vaccarella, ‘Autofiction, Illness Narratives and Life-Writing in Maggie Nelson’s Bluets

CHHS Research Seminar – Professor Helen Lambert

On February 23rd we were joined by Professor Helen Lambert who discussed, ‘Global Health challenges: Anthropological reflections’.

In this talk, Professor Lambert drew on her secondment to UKRI as Challenge Leader for Global Health and on three decades of experience as an anthropologist working on public and global health issues to reflect on changing approaches to configuring ‘global health’.  She considered what is needed for achieving interdisciplinarity and equitable collaboration and reflected on the role of the humanities and social sciences in addressing global challenges.

CHHS Research Seminar

On the 8th December the CHHS was joined by Dan Degerman who spoke to members about ‘Naturalism, Mental Disorder and Epistemic Injustice’.

 

Degerman explained that naturalistic understandings of human experiences and differences are at the root of much epistemic injustice, according to a growing body of critical scholarship. Naturalistic understandings frame matters like mental disorder, disease, and disability in terms of individual, biological dysfunction. In the process, they marginalise alternative interpretive resources that could permit people to perceive and articulate social origins and solutions to their own or other people’s distress. Critics argue that the consequent obscuring of social factors is epistemically harmful. More specifically, it constitutes a hermeneutical injustice because it deprives individuals of sense-making resources. To redress this injustice, these critics say we must undermine dominant naturalistic understandings and create more pluralistic interpretive resources.

Degerman argued that naturalistic understandings can be epistemically beneficial not just despite but because they obscure social factors. He did this by considering how some individuals with bipolar disorder regard and deploy the neurobiological understanding of their disorder, highlighting three functions it fills for them: explanation, declamation, and decontestation. Through performing these functions, the neurobiological understanding does marginalise alternative, social perspectives on bipolar disorder. However, this can be understood as a feature rather than a bug. By marginalising alternative explanations, the neurobiological understanding can help individuals with bipolar disorder resist epistemic injustice, for example, in the form of attempts to trivialise their experiences. Given this, those seeking to undermine naturalistic understandings of mental disorder – and indeed illnesses, disability, and other experiences – in the pursuit of epistemic justice are themselves at risk of contributing to epistemic injustice

CHHS and History Research Seminar: Dr Rebecca Scales

We were joined by Rebecca Scales on November 24th to hear about her work entitled, ‘Inventing Polio Care at the Colonie de Saint-Fargeau Disability and the Welfare State in Interwar France’.

Scales noted that in 1919, a polio survivor and Red Cross nurse named Ellen Poidatz created France’s first residential polio care facility for children, the Colonie de Saint-Fargeau, building directly off of her wartime work with disabled veterans. Like many wealthy bourgeois women of the era, Poidatz forged a professional career for herself in the “para-political” space of the interwar welfare state, relying on a combination of private donations and state subventions to create a unique institution that integrated orthopedic surgery, rehabilitation, and education for children. To obtain funds for the Colonie, Poidatz situated her work within the dominant eugenics and natalist politics of the 1920s, arguing that rehabilitating disabled children would preserve “the youth [France] so desperately needed.” Yet Poidatz and her staff (many of whom were disabled) also sought to create a “familial environment” for the children in their care by offering themselves as living models of successful disabled adults. This talk interrogated the “family politics” of Saint-Fargeau, examined why Poidatz felt compelled to use familialist metaphors to justify her social work, but also the complex negotiations—over medical treatment and outcomes, education, long-term family separation—that sometimes divided parents, children, and medical personnel. Finally, Scales considered how the Colonie de Saint-Fargeau’s “family politics” turned it into a model institution for France’s hybrid public-private welfare state that shaped the treatment of disabled children into the post-WWII era.

CHHS Event: Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Covid-19

On the 3rd of November the Centre for Health, Humanities and Science brought together scholars from a range of disciplines to host a Covid-19 workshop. Speakers included CHHS Steering Group members, Faculty of Arts colleagues, artists and clinicians. The full programme can be found below.

Professor Ulrika Maude, Director of the CHHS, thanked all participants for their wonderfully thought-provoking, moving and eloquent papers. We received a lot of enthusiastic comments and praise from audience members, one of whom referred to the event itself as ‘transformative’.

 

 

Centre for Health, Humanities and Science

University of Bristol

 Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Covid-19

1pm – 1:30: Lunch

1:30pm – 2:30pm: Giovanni Biglino (Bristol Medical School), Sofie Layton (Artist) and Chiara Bucciarelli-Ducci (NHS and Bristol Medical School), ‘COVID-19 through the Lens of Medical Students: Engagement and Artistic Representation’

2:30pm – 3:00pm: Martin Hurcombe (University of Bristol), ‘Active in Lockdown: Recording Active Leisure during the Pandemic’

3:00 – 3:30: Cleo Hanaway-Oakley (University of Bristol), ‘“They give birth astride a grave”: My Pandemic Pregnancy’

3:30 – 4:00: Refreshments

4:00pm – 4:30pm: Ali Round (University of Bristol), ‘Guided by the Science? Public Health during the Covid-19 Pandemic’

4:30pm – 5:00pm: Havi Carel (University of Bristol), ‘Transformative Pandemic Phenomenology’

5:00 – 5:30: Discussion and Closing Words

CHHS research seminar + English Department (online) – Dr Doug Battersby, Dr Louise Benson James, Dr Sarah Daw

On the 6th of October the CHHS co-hosted a research seminar with the English Department.

Dr Doug Battersby presented his paper ‘The Novel and the Heart’. In his talk, Battersby introduced his Marie Curie Global Fellowship project, “The Novel and the Heart: 1840–1940,” which will be carried out at Stanford University and the University of Bristol. The heart is perhaps the single most important trope in Western literary culture, widely exploited by writers to explore questions about authenticity and self-knowledge, virtue and ethical commitment, emotion and embodiment, illness and health, and volition and sexual desire. Such questions became the central preoccupation of literary fiction in the Victorian and modernist periods, and it is therefore not surprising that the heart features prominently in numerous canonical works, from Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre (1847) to James Joyce’s Ulysses (1922). But whilst previous interdisciplinary studies have shown how the heart’s cultural meanings have changed dramatically from the Medieval period onwards, these studies have not extended beyond the mid-19th century and have explicitly set the novel form aside as less worthy of interest than poetry, with its apparently more intuitive connection to cardiac rhythms. Battersby’s project will examine how representations of the heart in novels by canonical British and Irish writers evolved in dialogue with scientific and medical understandings of the organ specifically and the body generally.

Dr Louise Benson James presented her paper ‘Intracorporeal Narratives: Reading Internal Biology in Women’s Literature, 1880s-1930s. This paper introduced Benson James’ Marie Skłodowska-Curie project at Ghent University, entitled ‘Intracorporeal Narratives: Reading Internal Biology in Women’s Literature, 1880s-1930s’. The project examines British and American women’s fiction for its depictions of internal anatomy: organs and systems, circulatory, nervous, reproductive, and digestive, to analyse how women’s writing communicates bodily experiences and depicts the ‘intracorporeal’, narrative journeys through concealed and invisible organs. Benson James questioned: how do visualisations of the body’s insides and internal workings change through time? Does literature reflect medical developments and discoveries, for example echoing the shift from the nervous to the hormonal body? How are metaphors employed to aid us in visualising these systems and parts: the nervous system as a network of vibrating strings, hormones as postal packages or chemical messages, the sperm and egg as static and kinetic, the biological clock? Benson James is interested in the persistent desire to find a physiological rationale, to map pain internally, even when that pain has an emotional or psychological source. The project also explores how changing conceptualisations of the body interact with gendered notions of pathology and disorder. Comparing fictional texts to medical writing and advertising of the same era, it will track the development of and interaction between the medical understanding of the internal body, communication in the public realm, and exploration in literature.

Dr Sarah Daw presented her paper ‘Imagining the (Eco)Future: Ecotopian Thought in an Age of Climate Breakdown’. ‘Ecotopian’, or ecologically-ideal, visions of humanity’s future in the Anthropocene are a negligible presence within contemporary British and North American climate change discourse, particularly in comparison to the abundance of apocalyptic and dystopian depictions of the future. Apocalyptic narratives of the future are increasingly prevalent in contemporary discourse, as the climate crisis becomes ever more acute and rises further up global news agendas. There is also mounting evidence that, in the years since ecocritic Lawrence Buell argued that apocalypse constitutes the “single most powerful master metaphor that the contemporary environmental imagination has at its disposal”, far from promoting action and engagement, apocalyptic framing actually works to compound inaction and avoidance. However, despite the growing body of ecocritical work demonstrating the problems arising from the prevalence of apocalyptic imagery and thought within environmental writing, relatively little critical attention has been paid to its antithesis – depictions of ‘ecotopian’, or ecologically ideal, futures. This talk introduced Daw’s Marie Curie Global Fellowship research on ‘ecotopia’, which investigates the presence and absence of ecotopian visions of the future within contemporary climate change writing across disciples. In order to contextualise this new research, Daw outlined the Cold War history of modern environmentalism, considered the contemporary influence of this mid-century history, and discussed the lack of critical attention to ecotopian writing and thought within the field of ecocriticism.

CHHS Party

On the 30th September members of the University were warmly invited to a Centre for Health, Humanities and Science party. This event provided an opportunity for current CHHS members and those interested in learning more about the Centre to meet with colleagues, discuss shared research interests and hear more about the work of the Centre over light refreshments.

 

CHHS Research Seminar (online) – Dr Anthony Fernandez

On Wednesday, 2 June Dr Anthony Fernandez spoke at the Centre for Health, Humanities and Science Research Seminar. The title of his talk was ‘How to Empathize by Objectifying’.

In the literature on empathy in medicine, it’s common to contrast empathic openness with an objectifying attitude. In empathic openness, the clinician perceives the patient as an embodied subject expressive of intentions, desires, and emotions. In an objectifying attitude, on the other hand, the clinician perceives the patient as a mere body or as an organism with a physiological dysfunction. Beginning with the phenomenological studies of Drew Leder and S. Kay Toombs, and continuing through the present discourse in the field, phenomenologists have typically argued that clinicians should avoid objectifying their patients because it’s harmful, dehumanizing, and undermines effective care. Fernandez argued that these popular phenomenological characterizations rely on an oversimplified understanding of the relationship between empathy and objectification: The empathic and objectifying attitudes should not be understood as fundamentally opposed because, in some cases, fully empathizing requires that the empathizer partially objectify the empathee. Using the example of interacting with someone with Tourette’s Syndrome, Fernandez demonstrated how objectifying certain aspects their movements actually facilitates rather than impedes empathic understanding. Moreover, Fernandez argued that this example should motivate phenomenologists to rethink some key aspects of their traditional understanding of objectification.