Objects of safety and imprisonment (Binnie et al, 2020)
Exploring the conscious and unconscious relationships that people who experience breathlessness have with their health objects.
Exploring the conscious and unconscious relationships that people who experience breathlessness have with their health objects.
Jane Macnaughton and Havi Carel ask: Why are we not trying to understand the experience of breathlessness better?
Life of Breath researcher and mindful yoga teacher Kate Binnie offers recorded breathing support during the COVID-19 lockdown.
Explore this unique version of the Catch Your Breath exhibition and its collections at the Royal College of Physicians, London.
Senior Research Associate on the Life of Breath project, clinical music therapist and mindful yoga teacher Kate Binnie visited a…
Breathlessness is far broader than a physical symptom. It affects people’s mood, self-esteem and social links and often involves feelings…
Music therapist and writer Kate Binnie writes: Friday 29th September saw Oxford’s City Centre transformed by the Curiosity Carnival. This University-organised event…
Highlights and interviews from an evening of poetry and song to provoke deeper thought and discussion around the lived experience…
Elan Higueras shares the story behind his winning composition competition entry.
Life of Breath PhD student Tina Williams writes: The 2017 Research Without Borders Festival showcase exhibition ran at Bristol’s Colston…
air anthropology anxiety art breath breathe Breathe Easy breathing breathing space breathless breathlessness Bristol British Lung Foundation catch your breath COPD critical medical humanities durham events exhibition family health history illness interdisciplinarity jayne wilton language Life of Breath literature london lungs medicine mental health mindfulness music phenomenology philosophy poetry rcp research royal college of physicians singing smoking teamwork tobacco yoga