UPDATE: Pathologies - Questions of Embodiment in Literature, Arts and Science (UK) (3/31/07; 8/20/07-8/21/07)

full name / name of organization: 
Willis M \(HASS\)
contact email: 

PATHOLOGIES

Questions of embodiment in literature, arts and sciences

 

The Inaugural International Conference of the

Glamorgan Research Centre for Literature, Arts and Science

 

August 20-21, 2007

 

Plenary Speakers:

Tim Armstrong, Kelly Hurley & Jonathan Sawday

 

The newly formed Research Centre for Literature, Arts and Science, based at the University of Glamorgan, would welcome papers on topics falling under the title of ¡ÆPathologies¡Ç. Abstracts of no more than one page of A4 (approx 400-500 words) should be sent to all of the Conference organisers, and Co-Directors of the Centre, Professor Andrew Smith, Professor Jeff Wallace and Dr Martin Willis by MARCH 31, 2007. Decisions will be made in APRIL 2007.

 

* To consider how the body has been pathologized is to ask questions of what it means to be human. As the originating site of humanity the body (extending from the individual to society and nation) is the physical, metaphorical and philosophical place for the inscription of selfhood, identity, normality and change. The multiple pathologies of the body invite us to reflect upon bodily conditions and behaviours that mark out the boundaries of the individual, the social and the national as well as their transgressions. Where does the self begin and end? How do we construct normality, deformity, and monstrosity? How do culture, society and the individual relate and connect across the many pathologies that invade, infect, distress and reconstruct the human?

 

This conference invites the submission of abstracts for 20 minute papers dealing with pathologies (broadly defined) across the intersections of literature and science or the arts and science. Papers may deal with any historical, artistic or literary period. Topics may include, but are certainly not limited to, the following:

 

¡ü Representations of disease

¡ü The Socio-politics of medical research

¡ü The art and science of early modern medicine/pathology

¡ü Dissection

¡ü The body and the machine

¡ü Gothic bodies

¡ü Cultural pathologies of identity

* Pathologizing gender through science

* Neurasthenia and modernism

* The degenerate body

 

Please send your abstract, together with your name, university affiliation and position to all of asmith5_at_glam.ac.uk, jwallace_at_glam.ac.uk, mwillis_at_glam.ac.uk or alternatively to one of the organisers at: Glamorgan Research Centre for Literature, Arts and Science (RCLAS), Pathologies Conference, Department of Humanities and Social Sciences, University of Glamorgan, Pontypridd, CF37 1DL, UK.

 

 

Dr Martin Willis
Senior Lecturer in English Literature and Acting Head of the Division of English
Co-Director, Research Centre for Literature, Arts and Science (RCLAS)
Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences
University of Glamorgan
Pontypridd
CF37 1DL
01443 483491
mwillis_at_glam.ac.uk

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Received on Mon Mar 05 2007 - 14:08:54 EST