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SUMMARY; CHARSET=UTF-8 :"Culture, â€˜mentalâ€™ illness, and embodiment: Survey evidence of helpful and harmful effects of fiction-reading for eating disorders" Dr Emilly Troscianko (University of Oxford)
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URL:http://www.exeter.ac.uk/events/details/?event=7731
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20180129T153000
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ATTACH: http://www.exeter.ac.uk/events/details/?event=7731
DTSTAMP:20171129T112849
LOCATION:Byrne House
DESCRIPTION; CHARSET=UTF-8 :Egenis seminar series. 

The healing power of literature is far more often assumed than testedâ€”either that, or ignored as irrelevant to the serious medical business of curing illness. Neither attitude is helpful. Cultural factors can clearly be relevant to mental health, and the treatment-resistance of many mental illnesses, combined with the high financial cost of many existing therapies, makes the idea of using books to heal people an attractive one. But although fiction and poetry seem to be used fairly often in therapeutic practice, so far there is very little systematic understanding of what actually works and what doesnâ€™t for different conditions and individuals. 
 
I take eating disorders as a case study, and report on evidence from a large-scale survey conducted with the charity Beat. We found that reading some kinds of fiction is perceived to have therapeutic effects, but that other kinds can be highly detrimental to mental and physical healthâ€”in particular those texts which thematise eating disorders, which seem often to be sought out by sufferers specifically with the aim of exacerbating their illness. http://www.exeter.ac.uk/events/details/?event=7731
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