Abstract
The Medical School at Bristol University is noted for offering, and in some instances requiring, its students to work creatively with medical themes. Students, artists, educationalists and a web designer have worked to create an on-line exhibition of the resulting creative output. This can be viewed at
www.outofourheads.net This site is a themed repository of poetry, prose, drawings, paintings, cartoons, films, music, dance and rap. Most works come with commentaries that can be as illuminating as the works they describe. The site invites comment and welcomes new postings from anyone connected to medicine. As an alternative to the conventional pedagogical report, and in keeping with the subject matter, in this paper we tell the story of this unique educational enterprise through the narratives of four of its principle architects. The ‘Teacher’s Tale’, the ‘Designer’s Tale’, the ‘Curator’s Tale’ and the ‘Artist’s Tale’ offer different, personal, tellings of how the site came to be. Each tale contains hypertext links to notable works on the site some of which have become teaching resources within the institution. This paper is of relevance to anyone who seeks to explore and champion the human insights of this privileged community.
Keywords: curation; arts; creativity; medical humanities
(Published: 26 November 2010)
Citation: Medical Education Online 2010,
15: 5395 - DOI: 10.3402/meo.v15i0.5395
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1. ‘Compulsory creativity’: rationales, recipes, and results in the placement of mandatory creative endeavour in a medical undergraduate curriculum
Trevor Thompson, Catherine Lamont-Robinson, Louise Younie
Medical Education Online vol: 15 year: 2010
doi: 10.3402/meo.v15i0.5394
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Medical Education OnlineeISSN 1087-2981 This journal is published under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 Unported License. Responsible editor: David J Solomon.