Film review: Mannequin

  The Banality of Evil – Review of Mannequin, Egypt, 2015, directed by Dr Mina Elnaggar   Reviewed by Professor Robert Abrams, Weill Cornell Medical College, New York   Mannequin is a short, terrifying film with ambitions as large as its 7-minute running time is brief. The action starts immediately: An unnamed man who must […]

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Book Review: A Smell of Burning

    A Smell of Burning By Colin Grant London: Jonathan Cape, 2016   Reviewed by Dr Maria Vaccarella, University of Bristol   Colin Grant’s A Smell of Burning conveys a powerful message: being diagnosed with epilepsy means being associated with an intricate and captivating cultural history. Patients and families are connected to centuries of […]

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Symposium – Retroviral Cultures: AIDS, Twenty Years On

  1 December 2016, 2.00 PM – 6.00 PM Andrew Blades, Maria Vaccarella, Corinne Squire, MK Czerwiec Old Council Chamber, Wills Memorial Building   2016 marks the twentieth anniversary of the 11th International AIDS Conference in Vancouver, at which Taiwanese American researcher David Ho and his team revealed new antiretroviral combination therapies to the world. […]

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Film Review: Doctor Strange

The theme for the next issue of Medical Humanities is Science Fiction. There are many online articles already available on the theme (see Related Reading below). The blog will feature a series of reviews and original pieces on Medical Humanities and Science Fiction over the next weeks.   A Superhero inside you…   Review of Doctor Strange, […]

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