One Health + Humanities Days: Arts + Humanities Interventions
One Health + Humanities Days
Arts + Humanities Interventions
Story by Katie Hodges-Kluck
Photography by Colby McLemore & Katie Hodges-Kluck
Equine history. Cinematic dance. Moroccan archaeology. Mental health. What do these topics have in common? They were just a few of the subjects explored during One Health + Humanities Days (OHHD), a collaborative partnership between the Denbo Center (then the UT Humanities Center) and the UT One Health Initiative (OHI). OHHD showcased the critical role that arts and humanities play in understanding and exploring sustainability and global wellbeing, including human, animal, plant, and environmental health.
The events, which took place on October 25-27, 2023, were organized by UT arts and humanities faculty and included a broad spectrum of community participants and visiting speakers. “The range of programming was especially exciting,” said Beauvais Lyons, divisional dean of arts & humanities. The program included twelve separate events ranging from public lectures to interactive exhibits; from cross-disciplinary research discussions to theater games; and from live musical performance to community roundtables.
Pulitzer Prize-finalist David Haskell and artist-doctor Eric Avery drew engaged audiences from campus and the greater Knoxville community to their public lectures. Haskell discussed how attention to the sonic richness of the world can guide human exploration, ethics, and action. Avery spoke about how his art engages with issues such as societal responses to diseases, death, and sexual health. Avery also collaborated with faculty and graduate students in the UT School of Art’s printmaking program, and some of his prints and books were featured in an exhibition in the Printmaking Showcase Gallery. UT faculty members Nancy Henry (English) and Helene Sinnreich (Religious Studies) also gave public lectures that attracted everyone from literature students to veterinarians. Their talks also drew online audiences from a dozen US states stretching from California to New York.
“Mortality as an Object of Team Research: a SPARKS Event” brought together scholars working in a variety of fields, including Classical studies, history, nursing, and psychiatry, for shared discussions of how we think about human mortality. The group continues to meet regularly to bridge traditional disciplinary divides and investigate new theoretical approaches to the subject. Similarly, “300 Years of Surgery: Marin Marais + a Musical Perspective on the Medical Humanities,” represented a collaboration between the UT College of Music, the UT Psychological Clinic, and the UT Medical Center, blending live musical performance with descriptions of historical surgical processes and mental health issues.
Knoxville’s Unravelling Group, First Take Co., and Cattywampus Puppet Council united for an interactive participatory workshop exploring theater games and emotions related to climate change, while in Hodges Library passers-by could navigate a virtual exhibit by Stephen Collins-Elliott (Classics) exploring the effects of climate change in ancient Roman Morocco. UT Cinema Studies faculty, meanwhile, led an event at McClung Museum of Natural History & Culture investigating how dance, movement on screen, and sound recordings can foster awareness of the challenges of sustaining life on a wounded planet.
A roundtable session hosted by the Knox Birth Equity Alliance (KBEA) brought together local community leaders and maternal health experts and educators to share and discuss innovative ideas for addressing Black maternal health disparities in Knox County, Tennessee. And the Sense of Belonging team led by Jamal-Jared Alexander (English) held a workshop discussing ways to mitigate mental health issues often faced by Black, Indigenous, and People of Color (BIPOC) graduate students at predominately white institutions.
Ultimately, One Health + Humanities Days bridged traditional divides such as town/gown, humanities and STEM fields, disciplinary silos, and beyond for a rich and engaging series of events that are only the beginning of fruitful conversations, cutting-edge research projects, and ongoing partnerships between its participants. OHHD also marked the successful collaboration between the Denbo Center and the UT One Health Initiative in their quest to address topics of pressing concern and interest for people across our local communities as well as throughout Tennessee. “Partnering with the Denbo Center for Humanities & the Arts,” said OHI Director Deb Miller, “was a perfect pairing.”
One Health + Humanities Events
- Mortality as an Object of Team Research: a SPARKS Event
- Faculty PI: Monica Black, Professor of History
- “Sounds Wild + Broken: Learning From the Beginnings of Sound” Lecture + Book Signing by Pulitzer Prize Finalist David Haskell
- Faculty PI: Amy Elias, Denbo Center Director; Chancellor’s Professor of English
- 300 Years of Surgery: Marin Marais + a Musical Perspective on the Medical Humanities
- Faculty PI: Nathan Fleschner. Assistant Professor and Coordinator of Music Theory & Composition, College of Music
- Equine Health + Medicine: Historical + Literary Perspective
- Lecture by Nancy Henry, Nancy Moore Goslee Professor of English
- Black Maternal Health Community Think-Tank
- Faculty PI: Danielle Procope-Bell, Assistant Professor of Africana Studies
- Climate Change, Language Change: Creating a Vocabulary of Healing Through Theatre Games
- Faculty PI: Georgi Gardiner, Associate Professor of Philosophy
- “Art as (my) Medicine” Lecture by Eric Avery, MD
- Faculty PI: Beauvais Lyons, Professor, School of Art; Divisional Dean of Arts & Humanities
- Public Health in Nazi Ghettos
- Lecture by Helene Sinnreich, Chair, Department of Religious Studies
- Centering the Marginalized
- Faculty PI: Jamal-Jared Alexander. Assistant Professor of English
- Embodied Cinema: Affect, Dance, + Speculative Wellness
- Faculty PIs: Heather Coker Hawkins, Assistant Professor, School of Art; Brittany Murray, Assistant Professor of French, Department of World Languages & Cultures
- Environmental Change + the Decline of an Ancient City: The Case of Lixus, Northern Morocco
- Interactive Exhibit in Hodges Library
- Faculty PI: Stephen Collins-Elliott, Associate Professor of Classics
- Exhibition: Prints + Books by Eric Avery, MD
- UT Printmaking Showcase Gallery