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Description
Performance and medicine are now converging in unprecedented ways. London's theatres reveal an appetite for medical themes – John Boyega is subjected to medical experiments in Jack Thorne's Woycek, while Royal National Theatre produces a novel musical about cancer. At the same time, performance-makers seek to improve our health, using dance to increase mobility for those living with Parkinson's disease or performance magic as physiotherapy for children with paraplegia. Performance, Medicine and the Human surveys this emerging field, providing case studies based on the author's own experience of devising medical performances in collaboration with cancer patients, biomedical scientists and healthcare educators.
Examining contemporary medical performance reveals an ancient preoccupation, evident in the practices of both theatre and healing, with the human. Like medicine, theatre puts the human on display in order to understand and, perhaps, alleviate the suffering inherent to the human condition. Medical practice constitutes a sort of theatre in which doctors, nurses and patients perform their humaneness and humanity. This insight has much to offer at a time when established notions of the human are being radically rethought, partly in response to emerging biomedical knowledge. Performance, Medicine and the Human argues that contemporary medical performance can shed new light on what it means to be human – and what we mean by the human, the humane, humanism and the humanities – at a time when these notions are being fundamentally rethought. Its insights are relevant to scholars in performance studies, the medical humanities, healthcare education and beyond.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
Foreword by Professor Alan Bleakely
1. Introduction: performance, medicine and the human
2. Gazes and stages: looking at bodies in theatre and medicine
3. Playing doctors: the 'humanistic physician' breaks bad news
4. Chimeric Bodies: other selves in pathographic performance
Taking care: cultivating compassion in nursing and applied performance
5. Conclusion: performing encounters and entanglements
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Product details

Published | 20 Feb 2020 |
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Format | Ebook (PDF) |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 224 |
ISBN | 9781350022171 |
Imprint | Methuen Drama |
Series | Performance and Science: Interdisciplinary Dialogues |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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Mermikides interweaves personal history and the necessary detachment of academic writing, bringing an immediacy to the discussion that cuts through the analytical objectivity that defines so much discourse. One is impressed by the breadth of the research and the appropriateness of the case studies.
John Lutterbie, Stony Brook University, USA

ONLINE RESOURCES
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