Call for Papers: Altered Consciousness in Relation to Popular Culture
16-17 November 2013 Queen Mary, University of London,
United Kingdom
Closing date for submissions: 14 June 2013
This meeting will explore the theme of altered
consciousness in relation to popular culture, psychology, philosophy, religion,
medicine and literature during the period 1918-1980.
Many literary and popular authors and performers during
the mid twentieth century represented altered states of consciousness in their
work, responding to and participating in research relating to such topics as
interplanetary contact, ESP, clairvoyance, telepathy, mind-altering drugs,
psychic therapies, spiritualisms, shamanism, erotics, conversion, revivals,
somnambulism, precognition, distraction, group mind, multiple personality,
hypnotism, lucid dreaming, Vedanta, hysteria and automatism.
What was the continuing legacy of nineteenth-century
approaches to mind and spirit? How did work at the fringes of psychiatry and
psychology intersect with mind sciences that consolidated their authority
during the mid-twentieth century? What are the key interactions between
European, North American and non-Western sources? How did investigations cross
the borders between arts, sciences, religion, education and the military?
Priority will be given to submissions that show potential
for sparking discussion across disciplinary boundaries, and are accessible to a
non-specialist audience.
We are especially keen to hear from women contributors,
and those whose work extends beyond British and North American contexts.
Please send a talk summary of approx 300 words and author
bio of approx
50 words to: altconsc@qmul.ac.uk
by 14 June 2013.
Speakers accepted onto the programme will have 20 minutes
to speak.
This event is generously supported by: the British
Society for the History of Science, and the Faculty of Humanities and Social
Sciences, the Centre for the History of the Emotions, and the School of English
and Drama at Queen Mary, University of London.