COVID-19 and Shame
«Through both a “shame lens” and “shame sensitive practice,” readers in the medical humanities will gain tools and theory to interrogate the relationship between emotions and medical practice, looking to the heart of healthcare in society.»
Journal of Medical Humanities
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Detaljer
- Forlag
- Bloomsbury Academic
- Innbinding
- Paperback
- Språk
- Engelsk
- Sider
- 160
- ISBN
- 9781350283404
- Utgivelsesår
- 2023
- Format
- 22 x 14 cm
Anmeldelser
«Through both a “shame lens” and “shame sensitive practice,” readers in the medical humanities will gain tools and theory to interrogate the relationship between emotions and medical practice, looking to the heart of healthcare in society.»
Journal of Medical Humanities
«Six detailed, very telling case-studies implicate each one of us in adding to the anguish of the pandemic. In the context of thousands of unnecessary deaths, we blame and shame others for sins of omission and commission of which we are probably equally guilty. But the lasting realization of this pioneering study of shame as a social emotion is that we have been deliberately manipulated by a shameless government intent on diverting attention from its own culpability.»
Robert Walker, Professor Emeritus and Emeritus Fellow of Green Templeton College, University of Oxfo
«This book on COVID-19 and the role shame and shaming has played in the handling of the pandemic in the UK and elsewhere is much to be welcomed. It offers both a sophisticated understanding of a multidimensional concept and a wide-ranging analysis of its personal, social and political salience for pandemic governance and for how people struggled to make sense of their changed lives. The authors are to be congratulated for their accessible reporting of a ground-breaking piece of research.»
Graham Scambler, Emeritus Professor of Sociology at UCL, UK
«COVID-19 and Shame ... offers an important and provocative examination of the role of shame in the UK’s pandemic response during 2020. Across these distinct chapters, Cooper, Dolezal, and Rose highlight the multifaceted manifestations of shame and shaming within the context of Covid-19, and the book is well-structured to point to a central contention around the utilisation of shame at the expense of vulnerable and marginalised communities. Through well-chosen case studies and thoughtful analysis, each chapter furthers this argument poignantly and accessibly, advocating for ‘public health work which takes shame seriously and sets out to avoid and reduce it’ (p. 18). The book will be a welcome intervention in medical and health humanities, and will be of interest to scholars and general readers considering Covid-19, pandemic politics, and ‘shame sensitive’ approaches to public health.»
British Society of Literature and Science