1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910735793003321

Autore

Topping Margaret

Titolo

The Humanities Pandemic : Towards a Front-Line Approach / / by Margaret Topping

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Cham : , : Springer Nature Switzerland : , : Imprint : Palgrave Macmillan, , 2023

ISBN

3-031-31629-0

Edizione

[1st ed. 2023.]

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (152 pages)

Disciplina

361

001.30711

Soggetti

Education in literature

Literature

Public health

Literature and Pedagogy

World Literature

Public Health

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Nota di contenuto

1. Introduction: We Need to Talk about Covid -- 2 Cosmopolitanism, Monoculture and Inequality -- 3 Mobility Matters: Checkpointization, Rights and a New Way to Travel -- 4 An Intercultural Roadmap for Intersectoral and Interdisciplinary Collaboration -- 5 Conclusion: What Next for the Humanities?.

Sommario/riassunto

This book explores how the Humanities can play an essential services role in addressing global challenges such as the Covid pandemic. In arguing for their contribution alongside that of the Health Sciences, it calls for a new critical engagement – honest and self-reflective – from Humanities scholars with the question of how to overcome a fundamental challenge facing universities globally: finding a common language and set of ‘cultural’ assumptions between disciplines as the basis for communication. The book looks at the nature of the challenges that can beset collaboration across disciplines (and indeed across sectors, notably between researchers and the general public) and argues for a new Translational Humanities, in both the sense of an



applied Humanities and a Humanities that can translate itself across disciplines and sectors. Crucially, too, it suggests that it is not narratives such as a pandemic novel or contagion film that successfully engage with contentious debates about the challenges of Covid, but rather critically distant texts and thematic contexts that typically place the self in the position of other like travel narratives. This book sits at a previously unconsidered intersection between debates around interdisciplinary collaboration and communication, theories of intercultural contact and encounter, and the role of the Humanities in tackling global issues. Margaret Topping is Professor of French and Intercultural Communication at Queen’s University Belfast, UK. She has published extensively in the fields of travel and intercultural encounter, as well as on the public value of the Humanities. She is the author of Supernatural Proust: Myth and Metaphor in La Recherche Du Temps Perdu (2007) and Proust's Gods: Christian and Mythological Figures of Speech in the Works of Marcel Proust (2000).