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Novels, biopics, auto/pathographies and poems: exploring the value of health humanities within an undergraduate social sciences-based health studies milieu. / Wheeler, Sara Louise.
2017. Paper presented at BSA Auto/biography study group conference, London, United Kingdom.

Research output: Contribution to conferencePaper

HarvardHarvard

Wheeler, SL 2017, 'Novels, biopics, auto/pathographies and poems: exploring the value of health humanities within an undergraduate social sciences-based health studies milieu', Paper presented at BSA Auto/biography study group conference, London, United Kingdom, 9/12/16 - 8/12/17.

APA

Wheeler, S. L. (2017). Novels, biopics, auto/pathographies and poems: exploring the value of health humanities within an undergraduate social sciences-based health studies milieu. Paper presented at BSA Auto/biography study group conference, London, United Kingdom.

CBE

Wheeler SL. 2017. Novels, biopics, auto/pathographies and poems: exploring the value of health humanities within an undergraduate social sciences-based health studies milieu. Paper presented at BSA Auto/biography study group conference, London, United Kingdom.

MLA

Wheeler, Sara Louise Novels, biopics, auto/pathographies and poems: exploring the value of health humanities within an undergraduate social sciences-based health studies milieu. BSA Auto/biography study group conference, 09 Dec 2016, London, United Kingdom, Paper, 2017.

VancouverVancouver

Wheeler SL. Novels, biopics, auto/pathographies and poems: exploring the value of health humanities within an undergraduate social sciences-based health studies milieu. 2017. Paper presented at BSA Auto/biography study group conference, London, United Kingdom.

Author

Wheeler, Sara Louise. / Novels, biopics, auto/pathographies and poems: exploring the value of health humanities within an undergraduate social sciences-based health studies milieu. Paper presented at BSA Auto/biography study group conference, London, United Kingdom.

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - Novels, biopics, auto/pathographies and poems: exploring the value of health humanities within an undergraduate social sciences-based health studies milieu

AU - Wheeler, Sara Louise

PY - 2017/12/8

Y1 - 2017/12/8

N2 - In my professional capacity, I am a lecturer for a social sciences-based, undergraduate health studies course in the UK. In my private, personal time, I enjoy contributing and consuming creative writing outputs; I write the column ‘synfyfyrion llenyddol’ (literary musings) for Y Clawdd, a Welsh-medium community newspaper. In recent years, I have become increasingly interested in outputs which convey people’s private health experiences - from the fictionalised accounts in novels, poems, soap opera storylines and films, through to the non-fictionalised biopics and auto/pathograhies. I have also recently begun contributing to this genre myself, based on my own health experiences. It is now well established that the medical humanities can make a positive contribution to medical education. However, in the 21st century, the health humanities have emerged, providing a broader disciplinary scope and paradigmatic approach to the various outputs and artefacts. This presents us, in the field of social science-based health studies, with an opportunity to explore the value which these outputs can bring to the study of health within our field of enquiry. In this paper, I bring together my public interests in pursuing pedagogic excellence in the field of social science-based health studies, with my private, personal interests in the more literary genres. I explore the ways in which my knowledge of each can complement each other, and help to build engaging pedagogic practice, enriching the experiences of my students.

AB - In my professional capacity, I am a lecturer for a social sciences-based, undergraduate health studies course in the UK. In my private, personal time, I enjoy contributing and consuming creative writing outputs; I write the column ‘synfyfyrion llenyddol’ (literary musings) for Y Clawdd, a Welsh-medium community newspaper. In recent years, I have become increasingly interested in outputs which convey people’s private health experiences - from the fictionalised accounts in novels, poems, soap opera storylines and films, through to the non-fictionalised biopics and auto/pathograhies. I have also recently begun contributing to this genre myself, based on my own health experiences. It is now well established that the medical humanities can make a positive contribution to medical education. However, in the 21st century, the health humanities have emerged, providing a broader disciplinary scope and paradigmatic approach to the various outputs and artefacts. This presents us, in the field of social science-based health studies, with an opportunity to explore the value which these outputs can bring to the study of health within our field of enquiry. In this paper, I bring together my public interests in pursuing pedagogic excellence in the field of social science-based health studies, with my private, personal interests in the more literary genres. I explore the ways in which my knowledge of each can complement each other, and help to build engaging pedagogic practice, enriching the experiences of my students.

M3 - Paper

T2 - BSA Auto/biography study group conference

Y2 - 9 December 2016 through 8 December 2017

ER -