jeudi 9 août 2012

Santé et maladie dans la culture

CALL FOR PAPERS: Medical Humanities: Health and Disease in Culture 

POPULAR CULTURE AND AMERICAN CULTURE ASSOCIATIONS NATIONAL CONFERENCE

Washington, DC
March 27-30, 2013

The "Medical Humanities: Health and Disease in Culture" area for the 2013 Popular Culture Association/American Culture Association meeting in Washington, DC invites presentation proposals related to the portrayal of health, illness and health care in the discourses of popular and American culture. Proposals representing perspectives in the humanities and the arts (e.g., film, history, literature, visual arts), social sciences (e.g., anthropology, cultural studies, sociology) and mass media (e.g., print or electronic journalism) in historical or contemporary contexts are welcome.
Individual and full panel proposals are considered. For full panel proposals (generally four persons) please include titles and abstracts for all participants.
Subject areas might include but are not limited to:
• stories of illness from patient and health practitioner perspectives in novels, short stories, poetry, memoirs, graphic comics, etc., discussed in sociocultural, historical or political contexts
• historical and contemporary narratives of chronic illness as represented in films, television, advertising, news media, and social media
• historical and contemporary representations of illness (including stigmatization) in popular culture genres, the education of health professionals, and health care practice literature
• disability narratives in literature, history, and popular culture
• representations of health institutions or health practitioners in historical and contemporary perspectives
• health care reform discourse (e.g., public debate over national health insurance in electoral politics, disability rights, “patient-centered” health care, medical homes, health care access, health disparities, electronic medical records)
• pharmaceuticals and the pharmaceutical industry (e.g., drug/prescription/OTC use and misuse; popular perceptions; promotion and marketing; drug development or regulation; clinical trials)
• historical and contemporary perspectives on public health “threats,” e.g., obesity, smoking, addictions, antibiotic resistance, radiation
• historical and contemporary representations of health promotion through diet, exercise, personal or domestic hygiene, positive psychology
• historical and contemporary narratives of epidemics, pandemics, emerging and re-emerging diseases (e.g., cholera, polio, malaria, tuberculosis, HIV/AIDs, flu) in literature, television, and film
• global public health infrastructure issues (e.g., access to water and safety; famine and food safety; vaccine access; control of environmental factors that contribute to illness; civil unrest)
• representations of the globalization of disease (e.g., medical and dental tourism; national/international governmental public health organizations or non-governmental organizations (NGOs); global disease surveillance; public health “preparedness” efforts; “natural” or “man-made” disasters)
• panels on medical humanities teaching strategies or the reading/performance of creative works
Proposals of 200-250 words must be submitted online at the PCAACA website http://www.pcaaca.org/conference/instructions.php
DEADLINE: December 15, 2012

David E. Tanner
School of Arts and Sciences
Massachusetts College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences-Boston
179 Longwood Avenue
Boston, MA 02115
Email: david.tanner@mcphs.edu
Phone: 617-732-2908
fax: 617-732-2784 

Aucun commentaire:

Enregistrer un commentaire