BBC documentary on aphasia airs this Sunday
25 October 2017
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Speechless, made by award-winning filmmaker Richard Alwyn at the National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery over the past year, airs on BBC4 this Sunday, World Stroke Day (29 October) at 8pm.
Richard, who is also a senior tutor on the MA in Documentary Filmmaking at the MyAV·¶ Department of Anthropology, witnessed the impact of aphasia first hand after his brother-in-law, the journalist Dennis Barker, had a stroke in 2011 which left him speaking a bizarre, fluent gibberish.
âWhen Dennis had his stroke, it affected his language only, leaving him speaking a colourful but impenetrable language of his own, with all the rise and fall of familiar speech but none of the actual meaning. It was a terrible situation for Dennis and his family, and I wanted to learn more about aphasia and the role of language in peopleâs lives" Richard Alwyn
Richardâs film Speechless tells the powerful stories of two men who can no longer take language for granted. The film also allows us to glimpse the impact of such a life-changing condition not just on patients but also their loved ones.
Rachel Farrell, National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery consultant and Honorary Senior Lecturer at the MyAV·¶ Institute of Neurology, features in the documentary with fellow consultants Alex Leff (Professor of Cognitive Neurology at MyAV·¶ Institute of Neurology) and Jacqueline McIntosh (Speech and Language Therapy, National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery).
âThe documentary is fascinating and moving, upsetting and uplifting in its depiction of the isolating condition of aphasiaâ Dr Rachel Farrell
Speechless raises questions that straddle philosophy and science. Can we understand the world if we donât have language to name and describe it? Can we think without language? How much is our identity wrapped up in language? These questions are at the heart of conversations that Alwyn has with clinicians and therapists working to get patients with aphasia back into the world.
âAphasia is an unpleasant condition that hits patients and their loved-ones hard. We all get a tiny insight into it when we experience âtip-of-the-tongueâ phenomenon; that is, when you momentarily canât find the word (often someoneâs name) that you are after. But imagine having that every time you wanted to speak. We are working hard here at MyAV·¶H and MyAV·¶ to come up with therapies that make meaningful inroads into this disorder.â Professor Alex Leff
âAphasia is an unpleasant condition that hits patients and their loved-ones hard. We all get a tiny insight into it when we experience âtip-of-the-tongueâ phenomenon; that is, when you momentarily canât find the word (often someoneâs name) that you are after. But imagine having that every time you wanted to speak. We are working hard here at MyAV·¶H and MyAV·¶ to come up with therapies that make meaningful inroads into this disorder.â Professor Alex Leff
Further information
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