50 years ago, the visionary writer John Berger and Swiss photographer Jean Mohr published A Fortunate Man, a meditation on the role of a doctor that is still widely read by healthcare practitioners today. The book followed the daily life of English country general practitioner John Sassall, witnessing his compassion as well as his practice as a physician through storytelling and photography. 15 years after the book’s publication, Sassall took his own life. Taking this tragic event as a starting point, New Perspectives teams up with theatre maker, Michael Pinchbeck, to create a stage exploration of the book, interposing it with interviews with medical practitioners today. Part theatre-lecture, part expressionistic explosion of the book, A Fo...
Yet another novel about comedy, fame and madness. But with answers to the meaning of life thrown in ...
The enduring image of general practice during the “classic” NHS, from its creation in 1948 until its...
There is, I think, a resonance between being a patient and having a greater sense of wonder at thing...
To mark the 70th anniversary of the NHS, New Perspectives presents a devised show by Michael Pinchbe...
50 years ago, the visionary writer John Berger and Swiss photographer Jean Mohr published A Fortunat...
Adopting a public history approach, this community exhibition, screenings, talks, and participative ...
This chapter documents the making of a performance in 2018 called A Fortunate Man inspired by the bo...
To mark its 50th anniversary, Michael Pinchbeck was commissioned by New Perspectives to write and de...
I took John Berger’s book A Fortunate Man: the story of a country doctor to read over the New Year h...
‘… if I have to explain to someone, like the anthropologist from Mars, what any of these words like ...
In Spring 2021, during lockdown, I made contact with John Christie, film-maker and director of the T...
This memoir shows how an arrogant surgeon, whose worldview was entirely dependent upon scientific do...
Based on a Dissertation read before the Royal Medical Society on Friday, 21st October 1960Picture, i...
Triumph Over Tragedy: The Odyssey of an Academic Physician is the remarkable new memoir written by W...
Over the last two years I have taken care of a wonderful man named Stanley. Sadly, Stanley became se...
Yet another novel about comedy, fame and madness. But with answers to the meaning of life thrown in ...
The enduring image of general practice during the “classic” NHS, from its creation in 1948 until its...
There is, I think, a resonance between being a patient and having a greater sense of wonder at thing...
To mark the 70th anniversary of the NHS, New Perspectives presents a devised show by Michael Pinchbe...
50 years ago, the visionary writer John Berger and Swiss photographer Jean Mohr published A Fortunat...
Adopting a public history approach, this community exhibition, screenings, talks, and participative ...
This chapter documents the making of a performance in 2018 called A Fortunate Man inspired by the bo...
To mark its 50th anniversary, Michael Pinchbeck was commissioned by New Perspectives to write and de...
I took John Berger’s book A Fortunate Man: the story of a country doctor to read over the New Year h...
‘… if I have to explain to someone, like the anthropologist from Mars, what any of these words like ...
In Spring 2021, during lockdown, I made contact with John Christie, film-maker and director of the T...
This memoir shows how an arrogant surgeon, whose worldview was entirely dependent upon scientific do...
Based on a Dissertation read before the Royal Medical Society on Friday, 21st October 1960Picture, i...
Triumph Over Tragedy: The Odyssey of an Academic Physician is the remarkable new memoir written by W...
Over the last two years I have taken care of a wonderful man named Stanley. Sadly, Stanley became se...
Yet another novel about comedy, fame and madness. But with answers to the meaning of life thrown in ...
The enduring image of general practice during the “classic” NHS, from its creation in 1948 until its...
There is, I think, a resonance between being a patient and having a greater sense of wonder at thing...