Best Man by Owen Lewis. Dos Madres press, 2015 Reviewed by Wendy French. Best Man has just been awarded first prize in the Jean Pedrick Chapbook prize from the New England Poetry Club. When you read the poems you can certainly understand why Lewis’s work has received this recognition. Edward Hirsch’s epigraph features at the […]
Month: November 2016
Symposium – Retroviral Cultures: AIDS, Twenty Years On
1 December 2016, 2.00 PM – 6.00 PM Andrew Blades, Maria Vaccarella, Corinne Squire, MK Czerwiec Old Council Chamber, Wills Memorial Building 2016 marks the twentieth anniversary of the 11th International AIDS Conference in Vancouver, at which Taiwanese American researcher David Ho and his team revealed new antiretroviral combination therapies to the world. […]
Science Fiction Book Review: Spaceship Medic
The theme for the next issue of Medical Humanities is Science Fiction. There are many online articles already available on the theme (see Related Reading below). A Spaceship in Trouble: Reflections on Harry Harrison’s Spaceship Medic. Puffin books, 1976 Kindle version currently available Reviewed by Matthew Castleden Lieutenant Donald Chase, a […]
Book review: Is Literature Healthy?
Is Literature Healthy? by Josie Billington. Published by Oxford University Press, 2016. Reviewed by Dr Neil Vickers Many years ago, I blagged a ticket to an invitation-only symposium on the subject of medicine and narrative, held under the auspices of what was then the Arts and Humanities Research Board. The premise […]
Global Humanities: Writing as a form of protest
Ayesha Ahmad ‘Daughters of Rabia’ is a social media blog with over 50,000 viewers a week. The blog is a dashboard containing narratives of different forms – poems, essays, and short stories – from women, and sometimes men, in Afghanistan about the challenges they face often in the shadows of being silenced and shielded from […]
Art review: chronic conditions and the digital age
Changing Lanes: Art in long term conditions in the digital age – new ways to adapt By Shanali Perera Rheumatic and musculoskeletal diseases are the largest growing burden of long term disability in the UK, affecting over 10 million adults. The concept of empowering patients to better engage with self-management of their long-term conditions is changing […]
Film Review: Doctor Strange
The theme for the next issue of Medical Humanities is Science Fiction. There are many online articles already available on the theme (see Related Reading below). The blog will feature a series of reviews and original pieces on Medical Humanities and Science Fiction over the next weeks. A Superhero inside you… Review of Doctor Strange, […]
Book Review: A Body, Undone: Living On After Great Pain
Christina Crosby, A Body, Undone: Living On After Great Pain. NYU Press, 2016. Reviewed by Ayesha Ahmad There is a paradox in Professor Christina Crosby’s biography A Body, Undone: Living On After Great Pain–the paralysis that constrained her body so suddenly seems to have freed the language that we all possess and contain but which is generally […]