Dis-Ease
- Released on
- Runtime
- 120 mins
DIS-EASE is a feature-length documentary about how we imagine disease, and how that affects what we do when we encounter illness, outbreaks, doctors, treatments, and disability in real life. It dives deep into the weird, wild archives of medical imaging, public health messaging, and pop-culture outbreak narratives to understand how ideas have moved between science, science fiction, and political ideology over the past century. (Yes, this is a film that covers both antibiotic resistance and the persistence of zombie apocalypse films.) Ultimately, DIS-EASE is a provocation to re-think how we define both the "public" and "health" in public health - who is included, what counts as care, and what it means to be sick or well in a world perpetually on the brink of collapse.
DIS-EASE is a feature-length documentary about how we imagine disease, and how that affects what we do when we encounter illness, outbreaks, doctors, treatments, and disability in real life. It dives deep into the weird, wild archives of medical imaging, public health messaging, and pop-culture outbreak narratives to understand how ideas have moved between science, science fiction, and political ideology over the past century. (Yes, this is a film that covers both antibiotic resistance and the persistence of zombie apocalypse films.) Ultimately, DIS-EASE is a provocation to re-think how we define both the "public" and "health" in public health - who is included, what counts as care, and what it means to be sick or well in a world perpetually on the brink of collapse.
Cast
- Priscilla Wald
- Hannah Landecker
- Keiji Fukuda
- Sonia Shah
- Nancy Tomes
- Johanna Hedva
- Sridhar Venkatapuram
- Dora Vargha
- Nayan Shah
- Patricia J. Williams
- Sanjoy Bhattacharya
- Anjuli Raza Kolb
- Lioba Hirsch
- Edna Bonhomme
- Christos Lynteris
- Patricia Kingori
- Jacqueline Patterson
- Rev. Leo Woodberry
- Bharat Venkat
- Iona Walker
- Elena Semino
- Dana Brown
- Agnes Binagwaho
- Shantunu Nundy
Director
- Mariam Ghani
Producers
- Mariam Ghani