The International Society of Critical Health Psychology (ISCHP) conference will be in Bratislava next week. In preparation, the organisation has published its book of abstracts. I’ve found it very useful searching for specific terms (like stigma, pain, and Foucault) to see what work is being presented. There are some really interesting ideas being talked about here, and some potentially useful connections with the people doing the work. The book of abstracts can be found here: … [Read more...] about What’s current in critical psychology?
CPN Digest #42
Something for the weekend: The treadmill's dark and twisted past A Qualitative Study Exploring Physical Therapists’ Attitudes Toward Their Roles in Weight Management for People With Knee Osteoarthritis A qualitative study of long-term users’ experiences of physiotherapy in primary health care When Bodies Think: Panpsychism, Pluralism, Biopolitics The science of how we sense ourselves from within Framing citizenship: from assumptions to possibilities in health and physical education The perils of the human imagination Risk and the Spectral Politics of Disability Understanding Physiotherapists’ Intention to Counsel Clients with Chronic Pain on Exercise A critical habermasian … [Read more...] about CPN Digest #42
CPN Digest #41
Something for the weekend: The Fitness Craze That Changed the Way Women Exercise Philosophical bias is the one bias that science cannot avoid The Utopian Leisure of Soviet Sanatoriums Hegel and history How long does it take to mark an exam? Our culture affects the way we look after ourselves. It should shape the health care we receive, too Working the edges of Posthuman disability studies: theorising with disabled young people with life‐limiting impairments Special issue on auto-ethnography and activism Leisure and its educational embodiment Living with Parkinson’s Shaping Our Algorithms Before They Shape Us - by Michael Rowe Chronic living conference 2020 Exploring … [Read more...] about CPN Digest #41