The Big Heroine Genre: Motherhood and the Maternal Body in Postsocialist Chinese Television

Article summary by Chelsea Wenzhu Xu This article explores the “big heroine” drama genre, a new type of television show in China that tells powerful and dramatic stories of urban women. By examining this genre through multiple lenses—cultural studies, Marxist theory, feminist film and media studies, and medical humanities—the article analyzes how these shows critique […]

Read More…

You and Your Baby (Home, Husband, and Doctor)

Article Summary by Kate Errington You and Your Baby was a pregnancy advice booklet, produced by the British Medical Association (BMA) from 1957–1987. This booklet was provided to expectant mothers in the UK, free of charge, and offered authoritative information on pregnancy, childbirth and caring for infants. But, in addition to the typical information you […]

Read More…

Talking about Menopause and Health with the MenoMakers Craft Group

Blog by Jessica Hammett, University of Bristol, jessica.hammett@bristol.ac.uk What’s the relationship between the humanities and public health—rather than medicine? Public health typically focuses on populations rather than individuals, and on the prevention of illness and promotion of health and wellbeing. Sometimes seen as a ‘poor relation’ to biomedicine, it has enjoyed new prominence and recognition […]

Read More…

An Interdisciplinary Alliance that Matters: Medical Humanities

Anna M. Elsner and Monika Pietrzak-Franger, eds., Literature and Medicine (Cambridge University Press, 2024. ISBN-13 978-1009300070). Book Review by Burcu Alkan Medical humanities has gained extensive attention in the past decade and is now an institutionally established interdisciplinary field. Yet, historically speaking, literature and medicine were not quite so separate in the first place. As […]

Read More…

March 2024 Issue

Creating comics, songs and poems to make sense of decolonising the curriculum: a collaborative autoethnography patchwork [read the article summary] Muna Al-Jawad, Gaurish Chawla, Neil Singh “And Then It Spreads”: contagion and disease as metaphors of sociomoral contamination in Charles Burns’ graphic novel Black Hole [read the article summary] Arindam Nandi, Avishek Parui They are […]

Read More…

Post-Pandemic Futures: December 2025 Special Issue of BMJ Medical Humanities

Guest Editors Loic Bourdeau and Steven Wilson The immediate response to Covid-19 brought together political actors, health professionals, educators, industry leaders, artists, and activists. Yet the pandemic more generally has thrown into sharp relief the importance of connections in making sense of, and reacting to, health crises – connections between countries and peoples; between epidemiology […]

Read More…

Invisible Disabilities Should Not Mean Invisible Patients

Blog by Rebecca Zickerman   When doctors fail to communicate effectively with their patients, quality of care is impacted; on the patient side, communication barriers such as language, health literacy, and disabilities interfering with information processing may all contribute to detrimental health effects. Health-care providers need more training on how to communicate effectively with patients […]

Read More…

Acting My Age

Blog by Tina Chai   When asked my age, I almost always want to say sixteen before stopping myself to say twenty-four. I don’t feel twenty-four. At most, I’m twenty-three and three-fourths—oscillating between who I was and who I want to become, but not feeling quite there or quite good enough. Sometimes, I say something […]

Read More…