Research project on psychology and cinema by @Tim_Snelson, David Kirby (@king_gwangi) & @ray_macauley. In partnership with @BritSciAssoc & funded by @ahrcpress
In or near Cambridge on 21 June? Come along to this talk by @Tim_Snelson at @MuseumofCamb and find out about our latest research with @sciencemuseum's medical collections https://t.co/EkFCzFuL3I
Join us at @WidescreenWknd in Bradford for a free screening of Dracula: Prince of Darkness (1966) and behind-the-scenes tour of @MediaMuseum stores where you'll witness artefacts from this and other classic @hammerfilms https://t.co/ta3uzaOhRr
Join us for a fascinating (and completely free) #mentalhealthawarenessweek screening and Q&A this Sunday.
Psychiatrist and film producer Dr Mina Husain will screen and discuss her two award-winning short films exploring neurodiversity and mental health.🎟️https://t.co/EBnOrPqGHL
For Mental Health Awareness Week, we invited film producer and psychiatrist Dr Mina Husain to Bradford's @MediaMuseum to screen and discuss two of her award-winning short films, Bhai and Dia. 2pm Sunday 15 May. Free but booking required: https://t.co/hfCeL5BPVI
Joining us from @uniofeastanglia for our 'Demons of the Mind' screening of The Three Faces of Eve will be Dr. Tim Snelson (@Tim_Snelson)
This event will explore how psychiatrists and psychologists influenced cinema culture in unprecedented ways.
https://t.co/FIR4zxuCSs
Online first: 'From In Two Minds to MIND: The circulation of ‘anti-psychiatry’ in British film and television during the long 1960s' by Tim Snelson
On the BBC television play In Two Minds (1967) and its cinema remake Family Life (1971) dir by Ken Loach
https://t.co/1ry4KpzjAu
The Influence of ‘Psychiatrist Friends’ on British Film Censorship in the 1960s | Journal of British Cinema and Television https://t.co/n0mPbtkNFT
Tim Snelson and William R. Macauley assess interactions between the fields of mental health and 1960s cinema.