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Conference Highlights |
A short film highlighting the two day Translation and Medical Humanities Conference 2023 |
Trish Greenhalgh, Nicola Gardini, Charles Briggs, Mona Baker |
04 Jan 2024 |
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Into the Translation Zone |
Marta Arnaldi introduces the idea that medical humanities is a fundamentally translational field. This vision reshuffle, and invites us to rethink, our beliefs of what counts as science, practice, and/or knowledge. |
Marta Arnaldi |
04 Jan 2024 |
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Conversations Across the Translational Medical Humanities |
The speakers outline the possibilities and implications catalysed by rethinking translation and medical humanities as continuous, ever-changing, and synergistic fields. |
Marta Arnaldi, Charles Briggs, Charles Forsdick, John Ødemark |
03 Jan 2024 |
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Translation and Medical Humanities: Personal Narratives, Scholarly Journeys, and Visions |
The speakers share their disciplinary journeys (and crossings) by outlining the ways in which they came to research translation and medical humanities independently and collaboratively, as separate areas and as a unified field. |
Marta Arnaldi, Eivind Engebretsen, Charles Forsdick, John Ødemark |
03 Jan 2024 |
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Medical Humanities’ Translational Core: Remodeling the Field |
Marta Arnaldi helps us imagine medical humanities as a fundamentally translational field. She envisions ways of thinking translationally about health and disease, while also pinpointing potential risks and likely areas of failure. |
Marta Arnaldi |
03 Jan 2024 |
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Men Defending Women in Late Medieval France |
An interview with Dr Helen Swift about her book; Gender, Writing, and Performance: Men Defending Women in Late Medieval France as well as other developments in Medieval Literary Studies. |
Helen Swift, Landon Newby |
04 Apr 2014 |
7 |
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Defence of Women and Imagination in French Medieval Literature |
Interview with St Hilda's College Fellow and teacher of Medieval French Literature Dr Helen Swift about her book; Gender, Writing, and Performance: Men Defending Women in Late Medieval France as well as other developments in Medieval Literary Studies. |
Helen Swift, Landon Newby |
07 Apr 2009 |