PCA ACA Medical Humanities: Health and Disease in Popular Culture
The "Medical Humanities: Health and Disease
in Culture" area for the 2016 Popular and American Culture Association
meeting in Seattle invites 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:
- Narratives of physical and mental illness or disability told from the perspective of patient and/or provider in contemporary pop culture media: fiction, poetry, graphic fiction, memoir, television, film etc.
- Discourses of patient education and/or advocacy—magazines, websites, discussion boards, tv doctors, social media
- Intersections and missed connections: improving lay and expert communication about illness and wellness
- Narrative in/about/as medicine
- The medical humanities—what is the discipline? What can it do? How? What’s the connection with popular culture?
- The problematic representation of illness narrative in popular culture (quests, battles, wins, losses, survivors, victims—and the construction of the patient-as-subject)
- The construction of medical knowledge and beliefs about illness through the discourses of popular culture: medical melodrama, reality programs, social media, direct-to-consumer advertising, journalism, advertorials, the internet
- Public health initiatives, patient education, threats, and risk in popular culture
- The representation of global health issues and the globalization of disease in popular discourses
Proposal abstracts (max 300 words) must be
submitted online at the PCAACA website at: http://pcaaca.org.
Contact
Info:
Dr.
Carol-Ann Farkas
Associate
Professor of English
School
of Arts and Sciences
MCPHS
University
Boston
MA 02115
Contact
Email:
URL: