News at the Centre for the History of Medicine
'Last Taboo of Motherhood' audio plays are now available online
The 'Last Taboo of Motherhood’ audio plays are now available online
The artistic collaboration explores how women, their families, ‘experts’, and the wider community tell stories about motherhood and mental distress. The three audio-pieces produced from this exciting collaboration between historians and artists have been informed by a variety of historical sources, including first hand testimonies - oral histories and written narratives - from women who have experienced postnatal mental illness.
Written by Bryony Kimmings, Courtney Conrad and Sara Shaarawi, these pieces probe vital questions about women’s experiences of mental illness and the pervasive culture of silence that has existed around maternal mental health. It provokes reflections into how history might prompt new insights into our responses to postnatal mental illness today.
There are several ways to listen to the audios:
The audio plays discuss distressing subjects, including postnatal mental illness, infanticide and death and we recommend that they are suitable for ages 16+.
- You can access them directly on our websiteLink opens in a new window
- You can access them on Fuel Digital Link opens in a new window(You can listen free of charge, but need to register on the Fuel Digital website and purchase the audios for ‘0’ charge.)
- You can listen on SpotifyLink opens in a new window
- For more details of the audio tour and audience feedback click hereLink opens in a new window
Public Engagement - Polevault - Canal Audio Walk
Professor Hilary Marland collaborated with Talking Birds as part of the ‘Polevault’ endeavour linked to their Olympic project: ‘Decathlon 2012’, providing commentary on mental illness and infanticide linked to canals for inclusion in this downloadable ‘audio walk’.
http://www2.warwick.ac.uk/fac/arts/history/chm/outreach/polevault
Dr Tania Woloshyn's Public Lecture now available
Dr Tania Woloshyn's audio recording of her lecture: Irradiating the Sun-Starved: Light Therapies in Britain, c.1900-1940, which accompanies her public engagement exhibition, is now available on the CHM web.