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Conf/CfP - Sense & Sensation: Chronic Pain in the Middle Ages, 29 September 2017, University College London, UK

Publish Date: Feb 28, 2017

Deadline: Mar 01, 2017

About the conference

This is a call for papers for a conference organised under the IAS's Sense and Sensation research theme by Junior Research Fellow, Dr Alicia Spencer-Hall, entitled ‘“Why is my pain perpetual?” (Jer 15:18): Chronic Pain in the Middle Ages’ to be held on Friday 29 September 2017.

Pain is a universal human experience. We have all hurt at some point, felt that inescapable sensory challenge to our physical equanimity, our health and well-being compromised. Typically, our agonies are fleeting. For some, however, suffering becomes an artefact of everyday living: our pain becomes ‘chronic’. Chronic pain is persistent, usually lasting for three months or more, does not respond well to analgesia, and does not improve after the usual healing period of any injury. 

Following Elaine Scarry’s (1985) seminal work The Body in Pain, researchers from various humanities disciplines have productively studied pain as a physical phenomenon with wide-ranging emotional and socio-cultural effects. Medievalists have also analysed acute pain, elucidating a specifically medieval construction of physical distress. In almost all such scholarship – modern and medieval – chronic pain has been overlooked.

The new field of medieval disability studies has also neglected chronic pain as a primary object of study. Instead, disability scholars in the main focus on ‘visible’ and ‘mainstream’ disabilities, such as blindness, paralysis and birth defects. Indeed, disability historian Beth Linker argued in 2013 that ‘[m]ore historical attention should be paid to the unhealthy disabled’, including those in chronic pain (‘On the Borderland’, 526). This conference seeks specifically to pay ‘historical attention’ to chronic pain in the medieval era. It will bring together researchers from across disciplines working on chronic pain, functioning as a collaborative space for medievalists to enter into much-needed conversations on this highly overlooked area of scholarship.

Professor Esther Cohen (Hebrew University of Jerusalem), one of the foremost scholars on pain in the Middle Ages, will deliver the keynote address at the conference.

Relevant topics for this conference include

  • Medieval conceptions and theories of chronic pain, as witnessed by scientific, medical and theological works
  • Paradigms of chronic pain developed in modern scholarship – and what medievalists can learn from, and contribute to, them
  • Comparative analyses of chronic pain in religious versus secular narratives
  • Recognition or rejection of chronic pain as an affirmative subjective identity
  • Chronic pain and/as disability
  • The potential share-ability of pain in medieval narratives, such as texts which show an individual taking on the pain of another
  • The relationship between affect and the severity, understanding and experience of pain
  • The manner in which gender impacts the experience, expression and management of an individual’s chronic pain

If you’re interested in speaking at the conference, please submit an abstract of 250-300 words and a brief bio to the organiser,Alicia Spencer-Hall (a.spencer-hall [at] ucl.ac.uk), by 1 March 2017. Please also stipulate your audio-visual requirements in the submission (e.g. projector, speakers and so forth).

N.B. Speakers will need to register for the conference in due course. The registration fee is £20. The fee is waived completely for concessions (students, the unwaged, retired scholars).

For more information click "Further official information" below.


This opportunity has expired. It was originally published here:

https://www.ucl.ac.uk/institute-of-advanced-studies/ias-news/call-for-papers-chronic-pain-in-the-middle-ages-conference

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Disciplines

Humanities

Neuroscience

Psychology

Eligible Countries

International

Host Countries

United Kingdom

Conference Types

Call for Papers