Call for Papers: Demons and Illness: Theory and Practice
from Antiquity to the Early Modern Period
Centre for Medical History: University of Exeter, United
Kingdom
22 - 24th April 2013
In many near eastern traditions, demons appear as a cause
of illness: most famously in the stories of possessed people cured by Christ.
These traditions influenced perceptions of illness in Judaism, Christianity and
Islam in later centuries but the ways in which these cultures viewed demons and
illness have received comparatively little attention. For example, who were
these demons? How did they cause illness? Why did they want to? How did demons
fit into other explanations for illness? How could demonic illnesses be cured
and how did this relate to other kinds of cure?
How far did medical or philosophical theory affect how
people responded to demonic illnesses in practice?
This conference will take a comparative approach, taking
a wide geographical and chronological sweep but confining itself to this
relatively specific set of questions.
Because Jewish, Christian and Islamic ideas about demons
and illness drew on a similar heritage of ancient religious texts from New
Testament times to the early modern period there is real scope to draw
meaningful comparisons between the different periods and cultures. What were
the common assumptions made by different societies? When and why did they
differ? What was the relationship between theory and practice? We would welcome
papers which address these issues for any period between antiquity and the
early modern period, and which discuss Christian, Jewish or Islamic traditions.
The conference is hosted by the Centre for Medical
History at the University of Exeter, on April 22nd-24th, 2013.
Please send abstracts by 15th September 2012 to the
conference organizers, Catherine Rider and Siam Bhayro, Centre for Medical
History, University of
Exeter:
email c.r.rider@exeter.ac.uk
or s.bhayro@exeter.ac.uk.