Abstract

“The Arts and Health Research: Inspiring Creative Dialogue” special issue published in Cogent Arts & Humanities brings together a collection of scholarly, arts-based (or creative practice-based) re...

Highlights

  • Moving on to the research articles, Martin, Korchinski, Fels, and Leggo (2017) and Walmsley, Cox, and Leggo (2017) examine issues of social justice through the lens of poetic inquiry, the former focusing on the theme of hope and its salience to women in prison and the latter investigating the complex social and ethical issues arising in the world of reproductive tourism

  • Lowry (2017) and Puurveen (2017) shift attention to the lifeworlds of persons affected by dementia and Alzheimer’s disease: Kelson et al (2017) examine the potential of public art to explore attachments to place and enhance social citizenship for people with early-onset dementia

  • Charles and Lowry (2017) contend that creative practice provides a means of respecting the inherent relationship between knowledge and culture and reconciling Indigenous and non-Indigenous approaches to the historical trauma produced by Canada’s Indian Residential School System

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Summary

Introduction

Moving on to the research articles, Martin, Korchinski, Fels, and Leggo (2017) and Walmsley, Cox, and Leggo (2017) examine issues of social justice through the lens of poetic inquiry, the former focusing on the theme of hope and its salience to women in prison and the latter investigating the complex social and ethical issues arising in the world of reproductive tourism. Charles and Lowry (2017) contend that creative practice provides a means of respecting the inherent relationship between knowledge and culture and reconciling Indigenous and non-Indigenous approaches to the historical trauma produced by Canada’s Indian Residential School System.

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