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Pandemic and Beyond

Pandemic and Beyond

By Pandemic and Beyond

Conversations with researchers and the people they've worked with to understand the cultural, social, economic, legal and mental health impacts of the Covid-19 pandemic and find creative solutions. The Pandemic & Beyond project is funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council (UKRI) and is a hub where researchers, decision-makers and media can meet and share expertise and resources.
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Episode 24 - Co-designing COVID-19 vaccine interventions with Chinese communities in England

Pandemic and BeyondJul 20, 2022

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33:26
Pandemic and Beyond Episode 25: Museums, Crisis and Covid-19
Aug 06, 202219:25
Episode 24 - Co-designing COVID-19 vaccine interventions with Chinese communities in England

Episode 24 - Co-designing COVID-19 vaccine interventions with Chinese communities in England

In this podcast, Dr Eleanor O’Keeffe speaks to Dr Sarah Gong, who has worked closely with Chinese communities in the UK to understand the determinants that shape vaccine hesitancy and facilitate uptake. They are joined by Circle Steele, the CEO of the Wai Yin Society, which supports socially excluded and marginalised women in the North West of England. They talk about participatory and co-creative research processes, the benefits of long-term research partnerships, and reflect on the experiences of Chinese communities during the pandemic.

The research informed series of creative interventions to generate greater understanding about the vaccination programme within Chinese communities in England, which are discussed during the podcast. You can view some of the interventions created for the research on the project’s YouTube Channel.

Transcript available here.

Jul 20, 202233:26
Pandemic and Beyond Episode 23: Libraries in Lockdown

Pandemic and Beyond Episode 23: Libraries in Lockdown

Prof Ellie O'Keefe talks to Dr David McMenemy (University of Glasgow) + Nick Poole (CEO of CILIP, the UK's library and information association) about the impact of the Pandemic on libraries and the wellbeing of its staff. They discuss Dr McMenemy's brilliant project 'Downloading a New Normal' and its implications on privacy, freedom of access to information + information behaviour as library services pivot to the digital.

Jul 09, 202227:37
Pandemic and Beyond Episode 22: Poetry and COVID-19
Jun 30, 202222:28
Pandemic and Beyond Episode 21: UK Literary Heritage Sites under Lockdown

Pandemic and Beyond Episode 21: UK Literary Heritage Sites under Lockdown

Dr Pascale Aebischer talks to Dr Helen Williams who has been working with Dr David Rudrum to examine the impact of the pandemic on the literary house heritage sector in the UK. They are joined by Patrick Wildgust, the Curator of Shandy Hall (managed by the Laurence Stern Trust), about how these smaller literary heritage sites responded to COVID-19, the pivot to the digital, and their growing local and community significances under lockdown.

Jun 09, 202222:02
Pandemic and Beyond Episode 20: Sexual and Gendered Risks
May 26, 202232:33
Pandemic and Beyond Episode 19: Walking Publics/Walking Arts

Pandemic and Beyond Episode 19: Walking Publics/Walking Arts

The pandemic has changed how we walk and why we walk, with more people venturing outside during lockdowns and walking to cope with the stresses of the pandemic. Professor Dee Heddon, the James Arnott Chair in Drama at Glasgow University, talks to Dr Shruti Raghuraman about using walking as creative resource and her pandemic rapid response project,  which examines how the arts can support and improve physical health and mental wellbeing through encouraging inclusive walking. They are joined by Kate Green and Maxwell Ayamba, two artists who have worked in partnership with the project to inform the conversation about walking as a model of community engagement and develop creative and inclusive walking methodologies.

To learn more about the project and #WalkCreate, visit www.walkcreate.org.

Apr 18, 202227:01
Pandemic and Beyond Episode 18: The National Day of Reflection

Pandemic and Beyond Episode 18: The National Day of Reflection

On the National Day of Reflection, a collective remembrance initiative for COVID-19 pioneered by the end of life charity Marie Curie, Ellie O’Keeffe is joined by David Tollerton, Associate Professor in Jewish Studies and Holocaust Memory at the University of Exeter who has recently finished an AHRC funded project working in partnership with Marie Curie. We talk politics, historic memory cultures, and the possible futures of pandemic memorialisation in the UK and beyond.

For more on COVID-19 memorialisation, you can download a copy of Professor Tollerton’s report here.

Mar 23, 202230:31
Pandemic and Beyond Episode 17: Culture in Crisis

Pandemic and Beyond Episode 17: Culture in Crisis

To mark the publication of the Culture in Crisis report, Pascale Aebischer talks to the report’s lead author, Ben Walmsley of the Centre for Cultural Value (University of Leeds) and Holly Donagh of the Paul Hamlyn Foundation. They talk about the state of the industry, how the pandemic has exacerbated inequalities, about the future of digital performance and the importance of academics working hand-in-hand with policy-makers.

Mar 09, 202224:31
Pandemic & Beyond Episode 16: Performing Leadership Differently in the Cultural Industries

Pandemic & Beyond Episode 16: Performing Leadership Differently in the Cultural Industries

The overlap between Covid-19 and the Black Lives Matter movement has led to a lot of soul-searching in the cultural industries. In this episode, Pascale Aebischer speaks to Amitabh Rai of Queen Mary, University of London, about the work he’s done with leaders in the creative industries about the leadership structures needed to provide the right level and kinds of support for a diverse workforce, and to Tracy Gentles, CEO of STAF (Something To Aim For), a partner in this research. They talk about the need for change, how to effect it together with people within the industry, about trauma, how different forms of disadvantage intersect, and how to create diverse communities through mentorship and infrastructures of care.

Find out more about the project here.

Mar 08, 202225:02
Pandemic and Beyond Episode 15: The COVID-19 Review Observatory
Feb 10, 202225:04
Pandemic and Beyond Episode 14: Pandemic Ethics - A Public Dialogue

Pandemic and Beyond Episode 14: Pandemic Ethics - A Public Dialogue

The pandemic has presented many dilemmas to society about how to implement restrictions on social, cultural and economic life for the benefit of public health. The UK Ethics Accelerator has brought ethics research expertise to bear on addressing these challenges, to encourage more ethical decision making moving forward and in the future. In this podcast, recorded in 2021, Sarah Hartley talks with Professor Sarah Cunningham-Burley (University of Edinburgh), Hugh Whittall (Nuffield Council on Bioethics) and Henrietta Hopkins (Hopkins Van Mil) about their engaged research with the UK public. They discuss how the public have responded to the ethical dimensions of the pandemic in a series of participant-led public dialogues and hear from participant, Yasmin, about the experience of contributing to these workshops

You can find out more about the project and listen to our other podcast episodes at www.pandemicandbeyond.exeter.ac.uk.

Jan 12, 202218:56
Pandemic and Beyond Podcast 13 - Nursing Narratives: Racism and the Pandemic
Dec 08, 202122:38
Pandemic and Beyond Episode 12: Digital Performance Beyond the Pandemic
Dec 02, 202130:22
Pandemic and Beyond Episode 11: Heartbeat: Flute Theatre, People's Palace Projects and La Plaza Theatre, Peru on making theatre with neurodiverse participants
Nov 09, 202131:12
Pandemic and Beyond Episode 10: The Creative Doodle Book, with Victoria Tischler interviewing Matthew Reason and Vicky Ackroyd

Pandemic and Beyond Episode 10: The Creative Doodle Book, with Victoria Tischler interviewing Matthew Reason and Vicky Ackroyd

Victoria Tischler talks to Matthew Reason (York St John University) and creative practitioner Vicky Ackroyd (Totally Inclusive People) about their work on the Creative Doodle Book project. The Creative Doodle Book is a hands-on resource developed by Mind the Gap and York St John University to support socially distanced community arts practice during the Covid-19 pandemic. In particular it has helped people from marginalised and vulnerable groups to express their creativity in new and exciting ways.

You can find out more about Creative Doodle Book here.

The Pandemic and Beyond: The Arts and Humanities Contribution to Covid-19 Research and Recovery is an AHRC-funded research project at the University of Exeter. The project coordinates and communicates Arts and Humanities research projects that are designed to explore and mitigate the wide-ranging impacts of the Covid-19 pandemic. It provides interdisciplinary support to coordinate the Covid-19-related research funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council, providing a virtual hub where researchers, user groups and policymakers can meet, find out about related projects, and work together to share expertise and resources.

You can find out more about the project and listen to our other podcast episodes at www.pandemicandbeyond.exeter.ac.uk.

Oct 07, 202136:08
Pandemic and Beyond Episode 9: The Arts and Humanities Contribution to Covid-19 Research and Recovery, with Rebecca Wilson (Exeplore) interviewing Pascale Aebischer
Sep 27, 202126:14
Pandemic and Beyond Episode 8: Local food growing during Covid-19

Pandemic and Beyond Episode 8: Local food growing during Covid-19

In this episode of the Pandemic and Beyond podcast, Pascale Aebischer talks to Les Levidow and Andrea Berardi from the Open University about their AHRC-funded Covid-19 project 'Local food-growing initiatives respond to the Covid-19 crisis: enhancing well-being, building community for better futures'. They speak about how growing food locally has benefitted and strengthened communities during Covid-19, and how the project has empowered participants to tell stories about their experiences. 

You can see the spring 2021 results of the project with an overview, blogs and links to participants' films here.

The Pandemic and Beyond: The Arts and Humanities Contribution to Covid-19 Research and Recovery is an AHRC-funded research project at the University of Exeter. The project coordinates and communicates Arts and Humanities research projects that are designed to explore and mitigate the wide-ranging impacts of the Covid-19 pandemic. It provides interdisciplinary support to coordinate the Covid-19-related research funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council, providing a virtual hub where researchers, user groups and policymakers can meet, find out about related projects, and work together to share expertise and resources.

You can find out more about the project and listen to our other podcast episodes at www.pandemicandbeyond.exeter.ac.uk.

Sep 11, 202130:03
Pandemic and Beyond Episode 7: Ritual and religion through the pandemic with Dr Joshua Edelman and Revd Dr Nathan Eddy

Pandemic and Beyond Episode 7: Ritual and religion through the pandemic with Dr Joshua Edelman and Revd Dr Nathan Eddy

In this episode of the Pandemic and Beyond podcast, Pascale Aebischer talks to Dr Joshua Edelman (Senior Lecturer at Manchester Metropolitan University) and Revd Dr Nathan Eddy (Interim Director of the Council of Christians and Jews) about how religious communities have adapted during the pandemic, and how ritual has endured and transformed in the face of social distancing. They discuss the AHRC-funded project 'Social Distance, Digital Congregation: British Ritual Innovation under Covid-19 (BRIC-19)' of which Dr Edelman is lead researcher and which aims to document, analyse, and understand how religious communities have come together and how these experiences might make those communities stronger and more resilient in the future. 

The Pandemic and Beyond: The Arts and Humanities Contribution to Covid-19 Research and Recovery is an AHRC-funded research project at the University of Exeter. The project coordinates and communicates Arts and Humanities research projects that are designed to explore and mitigate the wide-ranging impacts of the Covid-19 pandemic. It provides interdisciplinary support to coordinate the Covid-19-related research funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council, providing a virtual hub where researchers, user groups and policymakers can meet, find out about related projects, and work together to share expertise and resources.

You can find out more about the project and listen to our other podcast episodes at www.pandemicandbeyond.exeter.ac.uk.

Aug 25, 202138:33
Pandemic and Beyond Episode 6: Motion Capture and Virtual Dance Performance with Dr Dan Strutt and Clemence Debaig

Pandemic and Beyond Episode 6: Motion Capture and Virtual Dance Performance with Dr Dan Strutt and Clemence Debaig

In this episode of the Pandemic and Beyond podcast, Pascale Aebischer talks to Dr Dan Strutt (Lecturer at Goldsmiths University, London) and dancer and computational artist Clemence Debaig about their AHRC-funded research project which experiments with live motion capture technology to bring physically-distant dancers together to enable new ways of rehearsing and performing choreographic dance work. They speak about the challenges of creating dance remotely, but also explore the new creative opportunities and benefits that this virtual form of performance might bring.

You can watch some of the experimental performances created by the project in their live showcase here

You can find out more about Clemence Debaig here and you can follow the project on Instagram @goldsmithsmocapstreamer

The Pandemic and Beyond: The Arts and Humanities Contribution to Covid-19 Research and Recovery is an AHRC-funded research project at the University of Exeter. The project coordinates and communicates Arts and Humanities research projects that are designed to explore and mitigate the wide-ranging impacts of the Covid-19 pandemic. It provides interdisciplinary support to coordinate the Covid-19-related research funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council, providing a virtual hub where researchers, user groups and policymakers can meet, find out about related projects, and work together to share expertise and resources.

You can find out more about the project and listen to our other podcast episodes at www.pandemicandbeyond.exeter.ac.uk.

Aug 05, 202130:06
Pandemic and Beyond Episode 5: Arts, public health and wellbeing in care homes - The Culture Box project with Victoria Tischler and Errol Francis

Pandemic and Beyond Episode 5: Arts, public health and wellbeing in care homes - The Culture Box project with Victoria Tischler and Errol Francis

In this episode of the Pandemic and Beyond podcast, Sarah Hartley speaks to Professor Victoria Tischler and Dr Errol Francis about their AHRC-funded project 'Culture Box' which promotes social interaction and public health through the arts in the time of Covid-19 for people living with dementia in care homes. They speak about how the provision of innovative arts activities during the pandemic can alleviate loneliness and improve wellbeing. 

You can find out more about the Culture Box project here, and you can follow the team on Twitter here, and Instagram here

To find out more about other research projects investigating communication during the pandemic, visit the Pandemic and Beyond project here.

The Pandemic and Beyond: The Arts and Humanities Contribution to Covid-19 Research and Recovery is an AHRC-funded research project at the University of Exeter. The project coordinates and communicates Arts and Humanities research projects that are designed to explore and mitigate the wide-ranging impacts of the Covid-19 pandemic. It provides interdisciplinary support to coordinate the Covid-19-related research funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council, providing a virtual hub where researchers, user groups and policymakers can meet, find out about related projects, and work together to share expertise and resources.

You can find out more about the project and listen to our other podcast episodes at www.pandemicandbeyond.exeter.ac.uk.

Jul 20, 202139:31
Pandemic and Beyond Episode 4: Trust, Communication and Twitter during the pandemic with Andrew Kehoe and Robert Lawson

Pandemic and Beyond Episode 4: Trust, Communication and Twitter during the pandemic with Andrew Kehoe and Robert Lawson

In this episode of the Pandemic and Beyond podcast, Des Fitzgerald speaks to Dr Andrew Kehoe and Dr Robert Lawson about their work gathering and analysing over 84 million pandemic-related tweets as part of their AHRC-funded research project 'TRAC:COVID – Trust and Communication: A Coronavirus Online Visual Dashboard'. They speak about the process of making the data available to all via their dashboard and discuss what the dashboard can tell us about the online conversation surrounding Covid-19, attitudes to public health interventions, and the spread of misinformation.  

You can find out more about the TRAC: Covid project here and you can follow the team on Twitter here. 

You can explore the dashboard here.

You can access The Conversation piece on the project here.

To find out more about other research projects investigating communication during the pandemic, visit the Pandemic and Beyond project here.

The Pandemic and Beyond: The Arts and Humanities Contribution to Covid-19 Research and Recovery is an AHRC-funded research project at the University of Exeter. The project coordinates and communicates Arts and Humanities research projects that are designed to explore and mitigate the wide-ranging impacts of the Covid-19 pandemic. It provides interdisciplinary support to coordinate the Covid-19-related research funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council, providing a virtual hub where researchers, user groups and policymakers can meet, find out about related projects, and work together to share expertise and resources.

You can find out more about the project and listen to our other podcast episodes at www.pandemicandbeyond.exeter.ac.uk.

Jun 23, 202131:04
Pandemic and Beyond Episode 3: Human Rights in Care Homes with Professor Wayne Martin and Angela Rhodes

Pandemic and Beyond Episode 3: Human Rights in Care Homes with Professor Wayne Martin and Angela Rhodes

In this episode of the Pandemic and Beyond podcast, Victoria Tischler talks to Professor Wayne Martin, Professor of Philosophy at the University of Essex and Angela Rhodes, Deputy General Manager at Woodleigh House Care Home, Healey Care Ltd., about the impact of Covid-19 on care homes and their residents. Angela speaks about the challenges she has personally faced as Deputy General Manager of a Care Home during the pandemic, and reflects on the support provided by Rapid Response Webinars run by the Essex Autonomy Project, led by Professor Martin. Professor Martin also speaks about his AHRC-funded research project "Ensuring Respect for Human Rights in Locked-Down Care Homes" and how it seeks to improve the protection of human rights in care homes.  

The Pandemic and Beyond: The Arts and Humanities Contribution to Covid-19 Research and Recovery is an AHRC-funded research project at the University of Exeter. The project coordinates and communicates Arts and Humanities research projects that are designed to explore and mitigate the wide-ranging impacts of the Covid-19 pandemic. It provides interdisciplinary support to coordinate the Covid-19-related research funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council, providing a virtual hub where researchers, user groups and policymakers can meet, find out about related projects, and work together to share expertise and resources.

You can find out more about the project and listen to our other podcast episodes at www.pandemicandbeyond.exeter.ac.uk.

Jun 16, 202140:26
Pandemic and Beyond Episode 2: Arts, Culture and Mental Health with Josie Billington, Lucy Geddes and Helen Wilson

Pandemic and Beyond Episode 2: Arts, Culture and Mental Health with Josie Billington, Lucy Geddes and Helen Wilson

In this episode of the Pandemic and Beyond podcast, Pascale Aebischer talks to Professor Josie Billington (University of Liverpool), Lucy Geddes (Liverpool Philharmonic) and Helen Wilson (The Reader) about the impact that restricted access to arts and culture during Covid-19 has had on mental health. Professor Billington speaks about the work that her AHRC project "COVID-19 CARE: Culture and the Arts, from Restriction to Enhancement: Protecting Mental Health in the Liverpool City Region" is undertaking to understand the relationship between access to culture and mental health in the Liverpool region, with Lucy Geddes and Helen Wilson speaking about their experiences of providing arts to communities within Liverpool during the pandemic. 

You can find out more about the Covid-19 CARE project here, you can read about The Reader here, and about the Liverpool Philharmonic here.

The Pandemic and Beyond: The Arts and Humanities Contribution to Covid-19 Research and Recovery is an AHRC-funded research project at the University of Exeter. The project coordinates and communicates Arts and Humanities research projects that are designed to explore and mitigate the wide-ranging impacts of the Covid-19 pandemic. It provides interdisciplinary support to coordinate the Covid-19-related research funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council, providing a virtual hub where researchers, user groups and policymakers can meet, find out about related projects, and work together to share expertise and resources.

You can find out more about the project and listen to our other podcast episodes at www.pandemicandbeyond.exeter.ac.uk.

May 24, 202135:21
Pandemic and Beyond Episode 1: Digital Theatre Transformation with Lucy Askew and Pascale Aebischer

Pandemic and Beyond Episode 1: Digital Theatre Transformation with Lucy Askew and Pascale Aebischer

In this first episode of the Pandemic and Beyond podcast, Des Fitzgerald speaks to Lucy Askew, Chief Executive of Oxford-based Creation Theatre and Pascale Aebischer, Professor of Shakespeare and Early Modern Performance at the University of Exeter. Pascale and Lucy were collaborators on a recent AHRC-funded Covid-19 rapid response project that investigated the way that Creation Theatre and their collaborators, Big Telly Theatre Company, adapted their in-person production of The Tempest to a digital production delivered via Zoom in the early days of the pandemic. They reflect on how the company faced the challenges of the pandemic, the impact the digital production had on the artists and audiences, the impact the research had on their practice, and on what the future of digital performance might look like as restrictions lift. 

The final research report and digital toolkit can be accessed for free here

You can find out more about Creation Theatre and their upcoming performances here.

The Pandemic and Beyond: The Arts and Humanities Contribution to Covid-19 Research and Recovery is an AHRC-funded research project at the University of Exeter. The project coordinates and communicates Arts and Humanities research projects that are designed to explore and mitigate the wide-ranging impacts of the Covid-19 pandemic. It provides interdisciplinary support to coordinate the Covid-19-related research funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council, providing a virtual hub where researchers, user groups and policymakers can meet, find out about related projects, and work together to share expertise and resources. 

You can find out more about the project and listen to our other podcast episodes at www.pandemicandbeyond.exeter.ac.uk. 


Apr 26, 202130:30