Centre for Culture and Health Research Seminar / Kulttuurin ja terveyden tutkimusyksikön tutkijaseminaari
The Research Seminars of the Centre for Culture and Health continue on Tuesday 9 December, 14:15-16:00 on site (A269) and on Zoom.
Arts and Humanities in the Clinic
Kulttuurin ja terveyden tutkimusyksikön seminaarit jatkuvat tiistaina 9. joulukuuta, 14:15-16:00 Zoomissa ja paikan päällä (A269). Seminaari pidetään englanniksi.
Arts and Humanities in the Clinic
Carrie Foulkes, University of Glasgow
Flux and Fragility: Language, Embodiment and Mortality in the work of Deborah Hay
This presentation examines themes of language, embodiment, and mortality in the work of Deborah Hay. By situating Hay’s intertwined dance and writing practices within arts and health discourse, I argue that her attention to bodily flux and fragility offers generative insights for both performing arts and clinical care. The talk draws on research conducted in the artist’s archives at the University of Texas, supported by a Harry Ransom Center Fellowship.
Carrie Foulkes is a visual artist, writer and researcher in the Medical Humanities. She is currently a doctoral candidate at the University of Glasgow. Her exploration of the intersections of culture, lived experience, politics and health combines scholarly research and creative writing. She has recently been a visiting researcher at the University of Texas in Austin and Linköping University, Sweden. Research interests include: aesthetics, architecture, text and image, poetry and poetics, subjectivity and embodiment, affect theory, critical disability studies, narrative studies, moral philosophy and bioethics.
Kerry Marshall, University of British Columbia
Use of Collage to Explore Discourses Related to Contraceptive Care in British Columbia, Canada
In this study, I collected data from two groups, health care providers that can prescribe contraceptives in BC and cisgender women and people who can get pregnant. I have completed my qualitative data collection and am currently in the midst of analysis. This presentation explains the arts-based component to data collection for the cisgender women and people who can get pregnant, they independently created a collage that was then used to guide the interviews.
Kerry Marshall (she/her) is a PhD candidate in the School of Nursing at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, Canada. Her clinical work as a registered nurse in areas of sexual and reproductive health directly inform her research. Her research areas of interest include arts-based research, reproductive justice, sex and gender, and health equity.
Arts and Humanities in the Clinic
Kulttuurin ja terveyden tutkimusyksikön seminaarit jatkuvat tiistaina 9. joulukuuta, 14:15-16:00 Zoomissa ja paikan päällä (A269). Seminaari pidetään englanniksi.
Arts and Humanities in the Clinic
Carrie Foulkes, University of Glasgow
Flux and Fragility: Language, Embodiment and Mortality in the work of Deborah Hay
This presentation examines themes of language, embodiment, and mortality in the work of Deborah Hay. By situating Hay’s intertwined dance and writing practices within arts and health discourse, I argue that her attention to bodily flux and fragility offers generative insights for both performing arts and clinical care. The talk draws on research conducted in the artist’s archives at the University of Texas, supported by a Harry Ransom Center Fellowship.
Carrie Foulkes is a visual artist, writer and researcher in the Medical Humanities. She is currently a doctoral candidate at the University of Glasgow. Her exploration of the intersections of culture, lived experience, politics and health combines scholarly research and creative writing. She has recently been a visiting researcher at the University of Texas in Austin and Linköping University, Sweden. Research interests include: aesthetics, architecture, text and image, poetry and poetics, subjectivity and embodiment, affect theory, critical disability studies, narrative studies, moral philosophy and bioethics.
Kerry Marshall, University of British Columbia
Use of Collage to Explore Discourses Related to Contraceptive Care in British Columbia, Canada
In this study, I collected data from two groups, health care providers that can prescribe contraceptives in BC and cisgender women and people who can get pregnant. I have completed my qualitative data collection and am currently in the midst of analysis. This presentation explains the arts-based component to data collection for the cisgender women and people who can get pregnant, they independently created a collage that was then used to guide the interviews.
Kerry Marshall (she/her) is a PhD candidate in the School of Nursing at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, Canada. Her clinical work as a registered nurse in areas of sexual and reproductive health directly inform her research. Her research areas of interest include arts-based research, reproductive justice, sex and gender, and health equity.