Being well together? Promoting health and well-being through more than human collaboration and companionship

Medical Humanities
Robert G W KirkTom Quick

Abstract

Being well together, an inaugural Research Forum, will critically examine the myriad ways humans have formed partnerships with non-human species to improve health across time and place. Across the humanities and social sciences, a growing body of scholarship has begun to rethink the prominence of the 'human' in our accounts of the world by exploring the category less as an individualised essence and more as a temporal process of becoming. From this perspective, being human becomes a process of 'becoming with', performed through interactions with non-human others. This paper introduces a diverse collection of studies, originally presented at a workshop held at the University of Manchester in 2018, which explored how emergent approaches within animal studies might productively and playfully engage with the medical humanities. In each case, human health and well-being is shown to rest on the cultivation of relationships with other species. Being well is rethought and remapped as a more than human process of being well together. Collectively, this research forum invites reflection on what the medical humanities might look like from a more than human perspective.

References

Sep 28, 2006·Annals of the Royal College of Surgeons of England·C DurrantC T K Khoo
Mar 24, 2009·BMJ : British Medical Journal·Jo C DumvilleUNKNOWN VenUS II team
Jan 20, 2010·Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological Sciences·Scott F GilbertJames Robinson
Mar 1, 2012·Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences·Sunil J Wimalawansa
Feb 13, 2013·The Quarterly Review of Biology·Scott F GilbertAlfred I Tauber
Jun 29, 2016·Seminars in Fetal & Neonatal Medicine·Lita M Proctor

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Citations

May 18, 2019·Health Promotion Journal of Australia : Official Journal of Australian Association of Health Promotion Professionals·Kim JoseKylie J Smith
Jul 11, 2019·Medical Humanities·Amanda S Robinson

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