posted by organizer: MadScholars || 1274 views || tracked by 1 users: [display]

ACLA 2020 : Literary Diagnosis and the Anti-Medical Humanities (ACLA Panel)

FacebookTwitterLinkedInGoogle

 
When Mar 19, 2020 - Mar 22, 2020
Where Chicago, IL
Submission Deadline Sep 22, 2019
Categories    medical humanities   science and literature   interdisciplinary studies   acla 2020
 

Call For Papers

With Health Humanities programs on the rise and medical memoirs flooding our bookshelves, it is easy to forget that the alliances forged between literary representation and medical discourse are new and fragile. From the 19th century onwards, writers from a multitude of traditions have squared off against doctors for the right to diagnostic prominence, particularly in capturing the "essence" of disease and the dis-eased body/mind. Their motivations, meanwhile, have spanned from the starkly political -- such Joseph Brodsky's mid-century assault on Soviet psychiatric norms -- to the intensely personal -- the use of faux-medical terminology in the memoir of French writer Camille de Peretti to expose the subjectivity at the heart of clinical observation.

This panel for the American Comparative Literature Association's annual conference seeks to explore the theoretical implications and methodological approaches of the Anti-Medical Humanities. Poets, playwrights and prose authors have undermined and continue to challenge medical authority over the ailing body or mind, and to present literary "diagnoses" in their place. Whose discourse best captures the experience of being ill, mad, or otherwise dis-eased? What drives these writers to resist the assimilation of the literary into the medical, and vice versa?


Potential topics include, but are not limited to:

- Political and cultural motivations for the elevation of literary over medical discourse;
- New perspectives on clashes between the figures of the Doctor and the Writer;
- Whether literary tradition and medical narrative are indebted to, even infected by, one another;
- How this clash reveals the difficulty of "translating" pain, disease, and the ailing body;
- The implications of championing fictional representation as an authority on real bodies;
- Approaches that disturb set divisions between the the literary and the "real;"
- The reworking of traditional battles between the literary and medical in post-modern contexts.

Please submit your proposal (max. 350 words) and CV by September 23rd to madscholarsanthology@gmail.com. Other expansions on this topic, and questions for the organizer, are welcomed.

Related Resources

MICAD 2024   The 5th International Conference on Medical Imaging and Computer-Aided Diagnosis
NEH Med Hum 2025   National Endowment for the Humanities Medical Humanities Conference
Neobaroque Now 2025   Neobaroque and/in the Contemporary World
Comparing Emotions 2024   Comparing Emotions: Literary and Cultural Dynamics
EAIH 2024   Explainable AI for Health
ICCAD 2025   2025 9th IEEE/IFAC/DBLP International Conference on Control, Automation and Diagnosis
HUSO 2025   7th Canadian International Conference on Humanities & Social Sciences 2025
IJHAS 2024   International Journal of Humanities, Art and Social Studies
IEEE ICAIGE 2024   2024 IEEE 2nd International Conference on Artificial Intelligence & Green Energy
ICMHI 2025   ACM--2025 9th International Conference on Medical and Health Informatics (ICMHI 2025)