Heidi Kaspar, Audrey Bochaton et al. « Therapeutic Mobilities », Mobilities, Fev. 2019

Résumé

This Special Issue expands mobi­li­ties research through the idea of thera­peutic mobi­li­ties, which consist of multiple move­ments of health-related things and beings, inclu­ding, though not limited to, nurses, doctors, patients, narra­tives, infor­ma­tion, gifts and phar­ma­ceu­ti­cals. The thera­peutic emerges from the encoun­ters of mobile human and non-human, animate and inani­mate subjects with places and envi­ron­ments and the indi­vi­dual compo­nents they are made of. We argue that an inter­ac­tion of mobi­li­ties and health research offers essen­tial bene­fits : First, it contri­butes to know­ledge produc­tion in a field of tremen­dous social rele­vance, i.e. trans­na­tional health care. Second, it encou­rages resear­chers to think about and through func­tio­nally limited, ill, injured, mentally disturbed, unwell and hurting bodies. Third, it engages with the trans­for­ma­tive character of mobi­li­ties at various scales. And fourth, it brings toge­ther different kinds of mobi­li­ties. The papers in this Special Issue contri­bute to three themes key for the thera­peutic in mobi­li­ties : a) trans­for­ma­tions (and stabi­li­za­tions) of selves, bodies and posi­tio­na­li­ties, b) uneven im/​mobilities and thera­peutic inequa­li­ties and c) multiple and contin­gent im/​mobilities. Thera­peutic mobi­li­ties comprise prac­tices and processes that are multi-layered and mutable ; some­times bizarre, some­times ironic, often dras­ti­cally uneven ; some­times brutal, some­times beau­tiful – and some­times all of this at the same time.