scholarly journals BAPHORAU - A arte como cuidado, saúde e ciência

2020 ◽  
Vol 25 (44) ◽  
Author(s):  
Michel De Oliveira Furquim ◽  
Dulce Meire Mendes Morais ◽  
Maria Clara Elias Polo ◽  
José Miguel Nieto Olivar

O trabalho apresenta a experiência do BAPHORAU, evento produzido pelo coletive da Faculdade de Saúde Pública, como proposta de pensar, refletir e reimaginar as práticas e os discursos da/na saúde. Os saberes de corpes que são historicamente negligenciados por parte do discurso da biomédico, se apresentam como protagonistas no evento que se propõem a pensar a saúde a partir de expressões artísticas e novas formas de diálogo com a sociedade. E o BAPHORAU se mostrou como um respiro em tempos de COVID-19, possibilitou homenagear os mortos deste período e criar novas redes de cuidado. AbstractThe work presents the experience of BAPHORAU, event produced by the collective of the College of Public Health, as a proposal to think, reflect and reimagine the practices and discourses of/in health. The knowledge of bodies that are historically neglected by the biomedical discourse, are presented as protagonists in the event that propose to think about health from artistic expressions and new forms of dialogue with society. And BAPHORAU showed itself as a breath in times of COVID-19, made it possible to honor the dead of this period and create new care networks.

2000 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 217-239 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sarah Tarlow

During the 1820s, 1830s and 1840s, garden cemeteries were founded in most cities in Britain. Their characteristic appearance owes much to a British tradition of naturalistic landscape design but has particular resonances in the context of death and mourning in the nineteenth century. This article considers some of the factors that have been significant in the development of the British landscape cemetery, including public health, class relationships and foreign influences (particularly that of Père Lachaise cemetery in Paris). It is argued that none of these things explains the popularity of this particular form of cemetery in Britain; rather, the garden cemetery offered an appealing and appropriate landscape for remembering the dead and mediating the relationship between the dead and the bereaved.


Author(s):  
Philip Joseph D Sarmiento

Abstract In a recent correspondence published in this journal, the author calls for spiritual interventions for the living and the dead that be considered by the medical community especially in the time of COVID-19. This paper further elaborates on the need to consider the death and burial practices of bereaved families of patients who died of COVID-19 with strict observance of health protocols. Death and burial practices are significant moments in finding meaning for bereaved families in accepting the demise of their loved ones during this pandemic.


1997 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 11-16
Author(s):  
Terrey Oliver Penn ◽  
Susan E. Abbott

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