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Archives for November 2016

Poetry=Medicine?

November 21, 2016 Leave a Comment

Sue Wootton

John Keats

“Poetry=Medicine”: this was the title of an event with which I was involved as part of last weekend’s  2016 Litcrawl festival in Wellington. We were four poets, plus MC and essayist Paul Stanley-Ward: a doctor, a physiotherapist, a chaplain and a literary scholar.

Medicine can be sweet: a balm, a pharmaceutical concoction that soothes and relaxes, that allows you to temporarily forget your aches and enjoy your life. Medicine can be harsh: strong chemicals, purgative or bitter tonic. Medicine always has side effects, because any attempt to tweak a part always sends ripples through the whole.

Poetry=Medicine? Here are some of the ways we tested that equation.

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Filed Under: Essay, Medical Humanities, Poetry, Writing Tagged With: Poetry

Theatre: a brave and bloody place

November 14, 2016 Leave a Comment

Liz Breslin

Losing Faith In the eighteen-somethings, an operating theatre was where a surgeon literally performed. The audience, jostling for a better view despite the tiered seating, were there to be entertained as much as to learn. While the modern stage is a somewhat more sanitised affair, theatre remains a brave and bloody place for laying out and suturing bleeding hearts.

My play, Losing Faith, which performed over six sell-out shows at Edgewater Resort in Wanaka, New Zealand, in September 2016, is my story but not my story and not necessarily the story of any of the estimated 13% of young mums and 10% of new dads who suffer post natal depression either. It’s a story of missed moments, of Coffee Group, of parenthood, under a somewhat surgical series of lenses.

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Filed Under: Drama, Essay Tagged With: Drama

Waipiata Sanatorium: through a novelist’s eye

November 14, 2016 Leave a Comment

Sue Wootton

Edwin + MatildaSome places exert a particularly strong pull on the imagination. One such site is Orangapai, the former tuberculosis sanitorium at Waipiata, positioned in the grand, high-sky landscape of the Maniototo, Otago, New Zealand. The sanitorium inspired Emily Duncan to pen her playscript Waipiata. For novelist Laurence Fearnley, Orangapai was the genesis for her 2007 novel Edwin + Matilda.
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Filed Under: Essay, Fiction, History Tagged With: Fiction

Dangerous innovations: health professions for women

November 14, 2016 Leave a Comment

Barbara Brookes

First Women's Medical College Building. Drexel University College of Medical Archives and Special Collections
First Women’s Medical College Building. Drexel University College of Medical Archives and Special Collections

Recently, at the College of Physicians in Philadelphia, I opened a textbook on The Principles and Practice of Nursing by Joseph S. Longshore, published in 1842. Longshore’s book preceded Florence Nightingale’s much more famous 1859 Notes on Nursing.  Joseph Longshore is the brother of a woman about whom I’m writing a biography. To my delight the fly page of the book was inscribed ‘To Hattie, With the Compliments of the Author’. Suddenly, with his handwriting there before me, I felt in touch with this remarkable man in a very personal way. To touch a page an author has inscribed is a tactile experience that digital archives lack.

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Filed Under: Education, History Tagged With: Education, History

Leonard Cohen (1934-2016)

November 13, 2016 1 Comment

Leonard Cohen

Filed Under: Music Tagged With: Music, Poetry

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