Conversation between artist Jakob Jakobsen and curator Lisa Rosendahl about Jakobsen's contribution to the exhibition After Monoculture, which is closing on Sunday 18 June. Jakobsen's work seeks to make visible the violent roots of contemporary Western mental health care focussed solely on the individual, searching instead for collective approaches and ways to understand illness as societal and relational.
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Conversation between artist Jakob Jakobsen and curator Lisa Rosendahl about Jakobsen's contribution to the exhibition After Monoculture, which is closing on Sunday 18 June. Jakobsen's work seeks to make visible the violent roots of contemporary Western mental health care focussed solely on the individual, searching instead for collective approaches and ways to understand illness as societal and relational.
Social Crisis Mental Crisis No. 3 | Radio Show on Communism and Mental Health April 18 2020
Hospital Prison University Radio
32 minutes 50 seconds
5 years ago
Social Crisis Mental Crisis No. 3 | Radio Show on Communism and Mental Health April 18 2020
Listen to the third episode of the radio show Social Crisis! Mental Crisis! with reflections on the notion of care, both within the psychiatric ward as well as within a communist perspective. We talk about care as reproductive labour within the strict hierarchy of the hospital in contrast to communist mutual care within self-organised hospitals and clinics.
Social Crisis! Mental Crisis! is a series of conversations on Communism and Mental Health in times of pandemia between the artists Sophie Carapetian based in London and Jakob Jakobsen based in Copenhagen. We will be back once a week with occasional guests.
Hospital Prison University Radio
Conversation between artist Jakob Jakobsen and curator Lisa Rosendahl about Jakobsen's contribution to the exhibition After Monoculture, which is closing on Sunday 18 June. Jakobsen's work seeks to make visible the violent roots of contemporary Western mental health care focussed solely on the individual, searching instead for collective approaches and ways to understand illness as societal and relational.