13 Avsnitt

  1. A Vital Practice: Translating Narrative Prothesis in Émile Zola’s L’Assommoir

    Publicerades: 2024-02-12
  2. Conference Highlights

    Publicerades: 2024-01-04
  3. Into the Translation Zone

    Publicerades: 2024-01-04
  4. I shiver a little, I shudder a little:” Gist Translation and Uncanny Bodily Knowledges

    Publicerades: 2024-01-04
  5. Working Knowledge and the Duality of Uncertainty: Translating Heterogeneous Knowledge Networks in Long Covid Clinics

    Publicerades: 2024-01-03
  6. Conversations Across the Translational Medical Humanities

    Publicerades: 2024-01-03
  7. Translating Symbolism into Precision Medicine

    Publicerades: 2024-01-03
  8. Health Rhymes with Death

    Publicerades: 2024-01-03
  9. Translation and Medical Humanities: Personal Narratives, Scholarly Journeys, and Visions

    Publicerades: 2024-01-03
  10. Health, Ecology and Activism: The Dark Side of Translation

    Publicerades: 2024-01-03
  11. Medical Humanities’ Translational Core: Remodeling the Field

    Publicerades: 2024-01-03
  12. Bodies in Translation: Towards a Translational Medical Humanities

    Publicerades: 2024-01-03
  13. Incommunicable: Toward Communicative Justice in Health and Medicine

    Publicerades: 2024-01-03

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This series of video podcasts highlights some of the key moments of the Translation and Medical Humanities conference which took place at the University of Oxford on 5-6 September 2023. This international conference explored, for the first time and in an interdisciplinary fashion, the interzone between translation studies and medical humanities; it invoked the role of the arts, humanities and social sciences as essential services for medicine and health care; and it reappraised the impact of biomedicine in our linguistic, cultural, and societal ecosystems. Organised by Dr Marta Arnaldi and Prof John Ødemark in collaboration with Oxford Comparative Criticism and Translation. With the contribution of Medical Humanities, The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities (TORCH), University of Oxford; Pitt Rivers Museum, University of Oxford; the Centre for Sustainable Healthcare Education, Faculty of Medicine, University of Oslo; and The Polyphony, Institute for Medical Humanities at Durham University. Funded by Bodies in Translation: Science, Knowledge and Sustainability in Cultural Translation, Department of Culture Studies and Oriental Languages, University of Oslo, and The Research Council of Norway.

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