These events may be of interest to a number of people
Louise
Louise Goodbody
Year 2 Director
Doctoral Programme in Clinical Psychology, Department of Applied Psychology, Canterbury Christ Church University, Salomons Campus at Tunbridge Wells, Broomhill Rd., Southborough, Tunbridge Wells, Kent TN3 0TG
Tel: 01892 507671 / 507667
Fax: 01892 507660
Email: [log in to unmask]
www.canterbury.ac.uk/appliedpsychology
Follow
us on Twitter (@CCCUAppPsy)
Please note: I usually work here Wednesday to Friday only.
Please note that emails are not a secure form of communication and careful consideration should be given to including content that is sensitive
and/or confidential.
For sustainability reasons please think carefully about the need the print this email.
From: Charley Baker [mailto:[log in to unmask]]
Sent: 11 January 2013 11:29
To: Paul Crawford
Subject: Events at Nottingham
Importance: High
Tue 12 and Wed 13 February, 6-9pm, Nottingham
Anti-Psychiatry and Its Legacies, Nottingham Contemporary
Programme of screenings and discussions in the context of the exhibition Piero Gilardi, Collaborative Effects.
Piero Gilardi’s work with marginalized communities, including those confined to mental hospitals, was influenced by Italian psychiatrist Franco Basaglia (1924-80). Alongside
Michel Foucault, R.D. Laing, Felix Guattari and Thomas Szasz, Basaglia contributed to the diverse foundations of the anti-psychiatry movement; he argued that all asylums should be replaced by open therapeutic communities, a controversial position which provoked
both mental health reform and inspired socially-activist approaches to artistic practice.
Over two evenings, a programme of screenings and discussions focuses on different national contexts involved in the development of Anti-Psychiatry and questions its status as
an interdisciplinary critical legacy bridging philosophy with creative and clinical practice.
Tuesday 12 February, 6 – 9pm
Free, The Space at Nottingham Contemporary
6pm Dora Garcia The Deviant Majority, From Basaglia to Brazil (2010,
34’)
Garcia’s film forms part of her ongoing investigation of the political potential of marginal positions. It is structured around encounters with three organisations: Accademia della Follia (Academy of Madness), the Trieste Psychiatric Hospital’s theatre company;
Carmen Roll, a former member of the German Socialist Patients’ Collective; and the Freaked on the Scene Theatre of the Oppressed, Rio de Janeiro.
7pm Panel Discussion
With contributions from John Foot, Professor of Modern Italian History, UCL. Foot is currently leading a project focused on Basaglia and the closure of mental asylums in Italy.
David Reggio, Kingston University/Universidade Comunitária da Região de Chapecó. Reggio has worked within institutional psychiatry at the renowned La Borde clinic and with the anti-psychiatry
movement in Brazil. Howard Caygill, Professor Of Modern European Philosophy, Kingston University. Caygill’s research interests include philosophy and psychiatry as well as contemporary European
philosophy, ethics and theories of resistance.
Wednesday 13 February, 6 – 9pm
Free,
The Space at Nottingham Contemporary
6pm Screening: Luke Fowler, Bogman Palmjaguar (2007, 30’)
The subject of Fowler’s film is a trained conservationist and certified paranoid schizophrenic who is fighting a legal battle against this diagnosis. Featuring discussions with
psychiatrist Leon Redler (a former colleague of R.D. Laing), this is a film about the injustices of contemporary psychiatric practice and also a portrait of the Flow Country, a remote area of rare blanket bog and wetland in Northern Scotland.
7pm Panel discussion
With contributions from
Duncan Double, Consultant psychiatrist Norfolk & Suffolk NHS Foundation Trust and founding member of The UK Critical Psychiatry Network, a platform for debate, discussion, lobbying and publication
to critique the contemporary psychiatric system. Alastair Morgan, Senior Lecturer in Mental Health, Sheffield Hallam University. Morgan’s perspective encompasses critical theory and clinical
practice, having worked as a qualified nurse in community adult mental health with marginalized and excluded groups.
Angela Woods, Durham University. An inter-disciplinary medical humanities researcher and author of The Sublime Object of Psychiatry: Schizophrenia in Clinical and Cultural Theory.
The events are free - but we recommend booking online in advance:
To register for Part I, Tuesday 12th February:
http://ncantipsychfullevening1.eventbrite.com/#
To register for Part II, Wednesday 12th February:
http://ncantipsychfullevening2.eventbrite.com/#
Dr Isobel Whitelegg,
Curator of Public Programmes
This message has been scanned for malware by Websense.
www.websense.com