The Shame and Medicine Project presents the Shame and Medicine in Literature Seminar Series, hosted by the Centre for the Cultures and Environments of Health.
Shame, Elspeth Probyn tells us, ‘is a painful thing to write about’ (‘Writing Shame’, 2010). This Seminar Series interrogates the connections between the experience of shame and its literary representation, extending discussions initiated by the ‘Shame and Medicine’ thematic issue of Literature and Medicine, edited by Dr Arthur Rose and Professor Luna Dolezal.
Scheduled seminars:
- Dr Katharine Cheston, 15th January 2025, 13.00 – 14.30 GMT (hybrid). REGISTRATION
TITLE: ‘Shame, (in)visibility and Ill Feelings’
ABSTRACT: Alice Hattrick’s Ill Feelings (2021) is a ‘genre-bending’ long-form essay; its title’s dual meaning underlines the entanglement of symptoms and shame that occur when illness is seen as having no explanation. In this presentation, I bring Ill Feelings into dialogue with a spoken account gathered through semi-structured interview, in order to elucidate the particular affective texture of this shame and to illuminate the distinct ways in which it shapes lives and texts. I argue that the shame that occurs for those living with ‘ill feelings’ is characterised by a sense of (in)visibility: by feeling simultaneously seen and unseen. I investigate how diagnostic labels employed in these contexts render suffering and sufferers (in)visible, considering the implications of this analysis for our broader understanding of shame and for our approach to literary life writing.
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- Dr Veronica Heney (University of Durham), 12th February 2025, 13.00 – 14.30 GMT (hybrid). REGISTRATION
TITLE: ‘Stories of shame, stories for shame: fiction and self-harm’
ABSTRACT: That self-harm is a shameful practice is often easily taken for granted. However, recent sociological work has called attention to the way in which self-harm’s shamefulness is actively constructed through narrative. This talk takes up that call, drawing on an innovative interdisciplinary method to weave together interview data and a close reading of Tim Blake Nelson’s 2015 film Anaesthesia. I will explore shame as contingent, relational, and actively brought into being, thus creating a more complex and nuanced account of the relation between shame, narrative, and self-harm. Specifically, I will attend to the location of shame in a ‘type’ of self-harming character, the significance of visibility and exposure in narratives of self-harm, the function of genre in invoking or communicating shame, and the uncertain relationship between de-stigmatisation and the enforcement of norms.
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- Penelope Lusk (University of Pennsylvania), 30th April 2025, 13.00 – 14.30 GMT (hybrid).
Registration and more details will follow soon.