Edited photograph of Santiago Ramón y Cajal's image of a nerve cell. Originally taken by Irene Tobón and posted on Flickr commons. Some rights reserved.
17th May, 2019
St Anne's College, Oxford
Can literature and narrative improve the lives of young people?
This one-day programme of talks and workshops will bring together literary and humanities scholars with service users and practitioners in the field of child and adolescent mental health. Together we will ask questions about the role of literature as a point of therapeutic
engagement in caring for children, adolescents, and young people.
We are interested in how literature might play a role when we experience pain, trauma, and stress, as well as the ways in which literature might be employed as a tool to improve communication and foster understanding between medical learners, healthcare providers, service users, and family members.
The programme can be found below, to book your place please visit https://www.oxforduniversitystores.co.uk/conferences-and-events/english-...
CPD certificates of attendance will be available to all delegates. The event has been approved for 6.5 CPD points by the College of Psychiatrists of Ireland
Full Programme
9.30 – 10.00 Arrival and Registration
10.00 – 10.10 Welcome and Introduction
10.10 – 11.10 First Keynote Address
Joanne Dunphy (Vice Principal, Oxford Spires Academy), 'Being Heard'
11.10 – 11.30 Coffee Break
11.30 – 1.00 Presentations
Dr Mina Fazel (Associate Professor in Psychiatry, University of Oxford), 'Adolescence and Authority: Exploring the Contradictory Messages Young People Navigate in Mental Healthcare'
Dr Gordon Bates (MBChB, MMedSc; University of Birkbeck), '"A Lot of You Cared, Just Not Enough": Teen Suicide in Popular Culture'
Dr Edward Harcourt (Faculty of Philosophy, Oxford and Director of Research, AHRC), 'Emotional Self-Regulation and Autonomy'
1.00 – 2.00 Lunch
2.00 – 3.10 Presentations
Dr Gaby Illingworth and Dr Rachel Sharman (Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences), 'The Teensleep Study: Sleep Education in UK Schools'
Students from Oxford Spires Academy, 'Poems from a School"
3.10 – 3.40 Coffee
3.40 – 4.50 Presentations
Dr Jacqueline Yallop (Senior Lecturer in English and Creative Writing, Aberystwyth University), 'Writing Pain Wales: Working with Creative Writing and Chronic Pain'
Professor Brendan Stone (Deputy Vice-President for Education, The University of Sheffield), '"I Travelled Deeper into the Heart of an Extraordinary World": Reflections on Entering into "Psychosis"'
4.50 – 5.50 Second Keynote Address
Dr Barbara-Anne Wren (Consultant Psychologist, Royal Free London NHS Trust), 'Paying Attention to Meaning: Using Narrative to Understand the Experience of Caring for Children and Young People'
5.50 – 6.00 Closing Comments
6.00 Drinks Reception
The conference is hosted by Dr Melissa Dickson (Birmingham), Dr Elizabeth Barrett (University College Dublin) and Professor Sally Shuttleworth (Oxford).