Playing the Cancer Card: Illness, Performance and Spectatorship investigates the experience of spectatorship in relation to illness, an area that has received comparatively little attention in Performance Studies. The thesis interrogates these concerns through original interviews, archival research, close textual readings of performances and performance documentation and draws on critical frameworks, primarily from performance, literary and cultural studies concerning spectatorship, illness, disability, documentation and narrative. The project analyses both my performances that exemplify being an object of spectatorship and my experiences as a spectator to the performance of illness. ! Playing the Cancer Card argues that performance, throug...
Major Research Paper (Master's), Critical Disability Studies, School of Health Policy and Management...
Illness narratives have become a cultural phenomenon in the Western world but their analysis continu...
© 2016 Medical Humanities. All rights reserved. We report a survey of audience members’ responses (1...
Fun with Cancer Patients: Practice-Based Research and the Affect of Cancer examines Fun with Cancer ...
This essay delves into the portrayal of the “unpresentable” in contemporary performances centered ar...
The two essays that comprise this thesis use personal narrative to discuss various aspects of illnes...
This chapter will demonstrate the potential for performance to blur the boundaries between the medic...
We report a survey of audience members' responses (147 questionnaires collected at seven performance...
Dramatic representations of cancer patients play an important role in engaging the public. However, ...
This book confronts the difficult relationship between theatre and cancer. It explores representatio...
Biomedical protocols and cultural metaphors of cancer enact the disease as an individual condition. ...
This thesis explores various dilemmas in making theatre performances in the context of social disrup...
As part of curated panel with Petra Kuppers, Bree Hadley, Patrick Anderson, Kirsty Johnson on "Conte...
Cancer has long been a cultural touchstone: a metaphor of devastation and a spectre of social as wel...
This special issue focuses on the fractious, contested concept of ‘participation’ as it has emerged ...
Major Research Paper (Master's), Critical Disability Studies, School of Health Policy and Management...
Illness narratives have become a cultural phenomenon in the Western world but their analysis continu...
© 2016 Medical Humanities. All rights reserved. We report a survey of audience members’ responses (1...
Fun with Cancer Patients: Practice-Based Research and the Affect of Cancer examines Fun with Cancer ...
This essay delves into the portrayal of the “unpresentable” in contemporary performances centered ar...
The two essays that comprise this thesis use personal narrative to discuss various aspects of illnes...
This chapter will demonstrate the potential for performance to blur the boundaries between the medic...
We report a survey of audience members' responses (147 questionnaires collected at seven performance...
Dramatic representations of cancer patients play an important role in engaging the public. However, ...
This book confronts the difficult relationship between theatre and cancer. It explores representatio...
Biomedical protocols and cultural metaphors of cancer enact the disease as an individual condition. ...
This thesis explores various dilemmas in making theatre performances in the context of social disrup...
As part of curated panel with Petra Kuppers, Bree Hadley, Patrick Anderson, Kirsty Johnson on "Conte...
Cancer has long been a cultural touchstone: a metaphor of devastation and a spectre of social as wel...
This special issue focuses on the fractious, contested concept of ‘participation’ as it has emerged ...
Major Research Paper (Master's), Critical Disability Studies, School of Health Policy and Management...
Illness narratives have become a cultural phenomenon in the Western world but their analysis continu...
© 2016 Medical Humanities. All rights reserved. We report a survey of audience members’ responses (1...