Love Sorrow Self Portrait

Love Sorrow Self Portrait

Content type: Health story

“Love Sorrow Self Portrait” is a self-portrait series the photographer, Natalie Brescia, has created to reflect her experience of major depressive disorder. The pieces frequently show her in shadow, and use split bisected frames with stark black and white contrasts so experience the nature of her emotions and a fractured sense of self. There are also thread and scissor images that Brescia says evoke the Greek mythology of the Fates with the compromising position of the scissors representing the closeness of death.

The series of images does suggest a narrative thread, and could prompt discussion of how narrative can be conveyed in images. The images also prompt discussion about the experience of mental illness and the ways words may fall short of conveying it.

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Look Now Project: Survivor Stories

Look Now Project: Survivor Stories

Content type: Health story

This digital humanities project includes stories and images of breast cancer survivors. Project creator Tula Goenka (a breast cancer survivor) and her collaborators seek to “break down the barriers between a survivor’s public persona and their private struggles with the disease, and to put a face on breast cancer in our local community.” The first installation in 2018 included interactive text, graphics, mirrors, and an experimental silent film accompanying 25 participants’ clothed photographic portraits and images of bare chests, and 19 who chose to remain anonymous except for their bare chest close-ups. In 2019, Goenka and her collaborators created TitBits: Breast Cancer Stories, a documentary theater performance. The multi-media website includes media coverage of Look Now and TitBits, oral histories, images of bare chests after lumpectomy or mastectomy, and resources on breast cancer.

I have used Anju’s story (“Life Happens Keep Smiling”) from this website in a Narrative Scribe Training workshop for college students, medical students, and health care professionals. After viewing the video together, we discussed what may be left out of a transcript and the importance of listening closely not only to what is said, but also how it is said, what is not said, and how our own experiences and identities shape what we hear.

 

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Penn State Collection of Graphic Medicine Narratives

Penn State Collection of Graphic Medicine Narratives

Content type: Health story

Organized by each year the class has been taught, this is collection of graphic narratives illustrates issues medical students face with details of med school life: imposter syndrome, harsh criticism, feeling insecure vs thinking they can save a patient’s life if they go with their instincts, etc. Amazing range of writing and drawing styles, very candid, some quite powerful. Some use medical terminology beyond interest or understanding of lay reader.

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Think you want to die at home? You might want to think twice about that.

Think you want to die at home? You might want to think twice about that.

Content type: Health story

This graphic medicine opinion piece by a professor of medicine and palliative care complicates the belief that a death at home is less expensive or more satisfying than death in a hospital. The author recounts conversations he has had with home caregivers about the burdens of complicated care regimes; the physical, psychological, and economic costs, and the systemic incentives to shift care to home caregivers who may be ill-equipped.

This short piece is useful for discussions about end of life care, both the personal burden for caregivers as well as the systemic and economic incentives. It includes brief quotations from caregivers the author has worked with as well as statistics about end of life care in the US.

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The ART of infertility

The ART of infertility

Content type: Health story

This is the link to a website for a national arts organization based in Michigan and Wisconsin. The organization curate art exhibits that portray living with infertility, designes curricula and writing worksins, plans outreach events, and advocates for infertility rights. They dsribe their missions as follows: “Through art, we break the silence around reproductive grief and push back against common misconceptions. We invite you to join us in our fight to make infertility visible.”

The site includes galleries of exhibitions, including photos with artist statements and a blog that features personal narratives about the experiences of infertility.

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Consolarte: The Artist’s Grief deck en espanol.

Consolarte: The Artist’s Grief deck en espanol.

Content type: Health story

A collection of artistic images paired with concrete suggestions for dealing with grief. The “deck” began (and continues) as an Instagram page that allows people to submit artwork+activity, and now exists in physical form as a card deck. This link goes to Spanish language version; the physical card deck and original Instagram site are in English. The suggestions described on each card could be used as discussion activities in intermediate level and up courses, and might be particularly well suited for community groups.

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