[acc-cca-l] "Who Cares? Sustaining relations of health beyond the time of crisis” March 18 and March 25 events

roberta buiani rbuiani at gmail.com
Mon Mar 14 09:41:27 MDT 2022


[△EXTERNAL]


good morning,
apologies fro cross-posting. I hope many of you will be interested.
our series so far has had some remarkable discussions. you can see all recording on our youtube channel (or on the event website)

best
Roberta
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Our next two events from “Who Cares?” Speaker Series are on March 18 and march 25. Mark your calendars
Nos deux prochains événement de "Who Cares?" Série de conferences ont lieu les 18 et 25 mars. Marquez vos calendriers

Critical care and sustainable care/ Soins intensifs et soins durables
March/Mars 18, 6:00-8:00 pm

Maria Antonia Gonzalez-Valerio, Professor of Philosophy and Literature, UNAM, Mexico City.
Suvendrini Lena, MD, Playwright and Neurologist at CAMH and Centre for Headache, Women’s College Hospital, Toronto
Adriana Ieraci, Roboticist and PhD candidate in Computer Science, Ryerson University
Lucia Gagliese  School of Kinesiology and Health Science York University

What is care? We are familiar with its institutional practice as critical care, that is, as a series of services and operations being performed on a body that visibly presents as ill (whether physically or mentally so).  From disease diagnosis to prognosis and treatment, critical care is dominated by principles of quantification and discrete analysis and is performed under conditions of emergency and just-in-time intervention, as if to fix a machinery or a mechanical apparatus.
This approach to care undermines the agency and living complexity of the ill person. It also completely bypasses the systemic (colonial, social and environmental) conditions of illness and make their chronic, long-term effects invisible. Among the victims of an exclusive focus on critical care are not only patients systemically disadvantaged by way of race, gender, geopolitical location and socio-economic status, but also professional caregivers (doctors, nurses, first responders) repeatedly exposed to the cynical logic of triage culture and cyclical burnouts.

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Qu'est-ce que le soin ? Nous sommes familiers avec sa pratique institutionnelle en tant que soins critiques, c'est-à-dire comme une série de services et d'opérations effectués sur un corps qui se présente visiblement comme malade (peu importe la forme de la maladie . Quel soit physique ou mental].  Du diagnostic de la maladie au pronostic et au traitement , les soins critiques sont dominés par des principes de quantification et d'analyse discrète et sont réalisés dans des conditions d'urgence et d'intervention juste à temps, comme pour réparer une machine ou un appareil mécanique.
Cette approche des soins porte atteinte à l'agence et à la complexité vivante de la personne malade. Elle contourne aussi complètement les conditions systémiques (coloniales, sociales et environnementales) de la maladie et rend invisibles leurs effets chroniques et à long terme. Parmi les victimes d'une focalisation exclusive sur les soins critiques, on trouve non seulement des patients systématiquement désavantagés en raison de leur race, de leur sexe, de leur situation géopolitique et de leur statut socio-économique, mais aussi des soignants professionnels (médecins, infirmières, premiers intervenants) exposés de manière répétée à la logique cynique de la culture du triage et aux épuisements cycliques.
Register HERE/Inscrivez-vous ici<https://yorku.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJEkde6trTIvGdK2lCy3txG9xcamwcrGVPZr>
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Building Communities and Technologies of Care/
Bâtir des communautés et des technologies de soins
March 25, 5:00-7:00 pm

Camille Baker, University for the Creative Arts, School of Film media and Performing Arts
Alanna Kibbe, Independent Artist, Toronto

Join Camille Baker and Alanna Kibbe for a discussion on the topic of Building Communities and Technologies of Care in the arts.
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Rejoignez Camille Baker et Alanna Kibbe pour une discussion sur le thème du développement des communautés et des technologies de soins dans les arts.
[Camille Baker - Inter/Her. interior of the immersive installation. the dome is lit by an intense red light to convey the idea of entering a womb]
[Alanna Gail Kibbe 2020 Hope Cocoon Acrylics on canvas. Two skeletal bodies are wrapped around each other, in holding and protection, within a womb-like cocoon. Despite lightning striking, attempting to wash the self away, the cactus flowers bloom under a dark sky. Transformed into all the new versions of the self that can become, the raven sits atop the cocoon, guarding one of the skeletons hearts for safe keeping. The other heart remains within the cocoon, giving life to both figures]
Register HERE/Inscrivez-vous ici<https://yorku.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJEqcOqvpjojG9YLAnr8DHOCAB3LHo2pDMK3>
“Who Cares?” is a Speaker Series dedicated to fostering transdisciplinary conversations between doctors, writers, artists, and researchers on contemporary biopolitics of care and the urgent need to move towards more respectful, creative, and inclusive social practices of care in the wake of the systemic cracks made obvious by the pandemic.
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‘’ Who Cares?’’ est une serie de conferences , visant a favoriser les discussions transdisciplinaires entre médecins , écrivains , artistes et chercheurs sur la biopolitiques contemporaine des soins et l’urgence d'évoluer vers des pratiques plus respectueuses , créatives et inclusives dans le sillage des fissures systémiques qui sont devenues évidentes avec la pandémie.
We wish to thank/ nous the generous support of the Social Science and Humanities Research Council of Canada,  New College at the University of Toronto and The Faculty of Liberal Arts and Professional Studies at York University;  the Centre for Feminist Research, Sensorium Centre for Digital Arts and Technology, The Canadian Language Museum, the Departments of English and the School of Gender and Women’s Studies at York University; the D.G. Ivey Library and the Institute for the History and Philosophy of Science and Technology at the University of Toronto;  We also wish to thank the support of The Fields Institute for Research in Mathematical Sciences

This series is co-produced in collaboration with the ArtSci Salon
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