Shame and Medicine Exeter
Toggle navigation Open search Twitter LinkedIn Facebook Newsletter

Louise Kathrine Folker Christensen Seminar


Event date: 12 September 2023

Venue: Hybrid



We are delighted to welcome visiting researcher Louise Kathrine Folker Christensen to the Shame and Medicine Project and the Wellcome Centre for Cultures and Environments of Health in September.  Louise Folker is PhD fellow at Copenhagen Centre for Health Research in the Humanities (CoRe) & Department of Odontology at the University of Copenhagen and her work focuses, in part, on experiences of shame related to dentistry and dental care among older adults.

Click here to watch the seminar.

Join us in person in the WCCEH Boardroom or online on Tuesday 12th September at 13.00 BST for the seminar:

‘Tooth Shame & its Various Choreographies – An Ethnographic Study of Dental Health-Related Shame Within Elderly Care Systems’.

An Ethnographic study of the entanglements between dental issues and shame experiences among older people within elderly care systems

In the presentation, Louise introduces the term tooth shame.Drawing on the flowering research on shame and stigma concerning body, health, illness, ageing, and class, the presentation explores the entanglements between dental issues and negative, self-aware experiences of shame among older persons who receive professional care within Danish elderly care systems. The presentation takes its point of departure in ethnographic fieldwork in Danish elderly care, including semi-structured life-story interviews with older persons, relatives, focus group interviews with care workers, dental care workers, and dentists, and close observations at nursing homes, home care units, and a rehabilitation center in Danish municipal elderly care. By presenting interview quotes, field notes, and ethnographic vignettes, Louise will argue that tooth shame creates a variety of choreographies and tooth shame practices – e.g., hiding smiles, withdrawal from social life, degrading oneself, avoiding daily dental care, and interaction with (dental) care workers. She states that tooth shame and tooth shame practices disturb not only self-worth and social life but also caring encounters by contaminating care workers and the general care practices, considerations, and dilemmas within elderly care systems. Thus, the presentation states that tooth shame bears the potential to create a damaging and life-limiting spiral accumulating in late life.

REGISTRATION: Online or In Person.

Photo by Photo Boards on Unsplash




Back home Back to the main events page