Utopian lab: Stranger than kindness

Kings College London
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Event has ended
This event ended on Thursday 18th of August 2016
Admission
Free
Venue Information
Kings College London
Strand, WC2R 2LS
Nearest Tube/Rail Stations
Temple 0.14 miles

What can we do to enable, embody and engender care in carers? We appear to revel in a body politic that makes demands of people; instructs them to be compassionate but does not give thought to how we can construct sustainable compassion.

Mark Radcliffe’s novel Stranger than kindness was ostensibly about what happens to (mental health) nurses who are scarred, bruised or traumatised by the things they have seen or done. As a former nurse he was always interested in how caring reshaped the nurse; how what you witness fills or empties you. He tried to answer some of these questions about carers in his novel, drawing his initial ‘data’ from fiction, and the novel’s informing ideas from philosopher Merleau Ponty, from neuroscientist Damasio, and from medical humanist Iain McGilchrist.

Stranger than kindness is an installation that presents some of these testimonies alongside extracts from the novel and photographs of the sea.

At the heart of Stranger than kindness is a desire to find out how re-conceptualising the art of caring might help us at the bedside. But also an acknowledgement that physicality, curiosity and reflexivity (or just keeping swimming) might help sustain the ability to care.

This project is part of the Utopian lab, a contemporary glimpse of the Health Faculties at King’s College London. The crusade to understand, save and compliment the human body and mind is the spirit of Utopia itself, uniting cultures, defining humanity and standing on the shoulders of giants.

Rotating through the different stories of present day work day work being carried out across the Health Faculties at King’s College London, Utopian lab is a snapshot of the future with roots firmly planted in King’s College Hospital’s past: a workhouse on the Strand that was propelled to notoriety by the surgery work of Joseph Lister in the late 19th century.

Tags: Exhibition

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