The chapter entitled “Truth or Dare; Women, Politics, and the Symphysiotomy Scandal”, by Oonagh Walsh, was published in this book “Geo Humanities and Health” by Springer Nature AG.
The chapter contained defamatory statements detrimental to the reputations of Marie O’Connor, author and research sociologist specialising in women’s health, and Colm Mac Geehin and Ruadhán Mac Aodháin, solicitors in private practice.
The chapter has been withdrawn and will not be republished. Oonagh Walsh and Springer Nature Switzerland AG apologise to Marie O’Connor, Colm Mac Geehin and Ruadhán Mac Aodháin
This volume brings together research in the Geo Humanities from various intellectual perspectives to illustrate the benefits of humanities-inspired approaches in understanding and confronting historically entrenched and recently emergent health-related challenges. In three main sections, this volume seeks to foreground the richness of work entangling medicine and health with the concerns of geography and of the Humanities. This volume will be of interest to academics and researchers in the Geographies of health and medicine, social sciences in Geo Humanities, and health humanities, and students in programs focusing on the humanities and health.
In the book’s first section, Bodies, the authors explore the material, sensory and more than physical capacities of bodies in accounting for experiences of death, air raids, immigration, dance therapy, asthma and blindness. Section two, Voice, addresses the nature of evidence, HIV/AIDS policy, patient voices in animal research, homelessness, and constructions of truth. The final section, Practice, focuses on creative writing, as well as the pedagogic tools of teaching with the asylum, the creative practice of nuclear emergency planning zones, arts-based care for the elderly, and cartographic practices within health research.
Daftar Isi
Chapter 1-Geohumanities and health.- Chapter 2-Electronic atmospheres: assemblage, form and technique in the onflow of ‘techno with intelligence’.- Chapter 3-Beyond therapy: exploring the potential of dance to improve social inclusion for people with dementia.- Chapter 4-Bodies at the crossroads between immigration and health.- Chapter 5-‘Dirty bodies, dirty minds’ social hygiene campaigns, women activists and nurses in the early 20th century.- Chapter 6-Sensing nature: unraveling metanarratives of blindness.- Chapter 7-Truth or dare: women, politics and the symphysiotomy scandal.- Chapter 8-‘Critical places’.- Chapter 9-Placing patient voices in animal research.- Chapter 10-Subjectivity, experience and evidence.- Chapter 11-An inherent and necessary ethics of care.- Chapter 12-Geographies of care: surviving homelessness in Melbourne.- Chapter 13-Cartographies of health: from remote to intimate sensing.- Chapter 14-The caring artist.- Chapter 15-‘Asylum pedagogy’ and teaching experiments in Geohumanities.- Chapter 16-Afterword.
Tentang Penulis
Dr. Sarah Atkinson is a Professor of Geography and Medical Humanities in the Department of Geography, and Deputy Head of Faculty in Social Science and Health Research Operations at Durham University. As professor of geography and medical humanities, her academic attention is primarily characterized by interdisciplinary encounters with contemporary issues of medicine and health informed by her background in anthropology, nutrition and public health policy. Dr. Atkinson’s experience prior to working at Durham University was in policy implementation both as practitioner, consultant and researcher in sub-Saharan Africa, Latin America and India. Her research seeks to understand and interrogate the assumptions underlying mainstream health-related policies and practices and particularly in relation to non-clinical settings. Topics addressed in this way include how the concept of well-being is interpreted, how care and responsibility for care are understood, constrained and located andhow engagement with the creative arts offers a transformative potential for health and well-being, both as personally experienced and as politically conceptualized.
Dr. Rachel Hunt is a lecturer in Geo Humanities in the School of Geosciences at Edinburgh University, where she engages in both teaching and research in Human Geography related fields. She earned her Ph.D. in Human Geography from the University of Glasgow in 2016, and has previously been a researcher in Rural Affairs and Environment in the Strategic Research Department of the Scottish Government, and a Research Assistant in the School of Education at the University of Glasgow.