Call for Papers: Histories of Healthy Ageing
Histories of Healthy Ageing
University of Groningen, 21–23 June 2017
As Western populations grow increasingly older, ‘healthy
ageing’ is presented as one of today's greatest medical and societal
challenges. However, contrary to what many policy makers want us to believe,
the aspiration to live long, healthy and happy lives is not a problem specific
to our times. On the contrary successful ageing has a long history.
The conference Histories of Healthy Ageing is based on the
assumption that 'healthy ageing' has informed the medical agenda since
Antiquity. With 'healthy ageing' we refer to ways of thinking about and
treating the body not only from a medical perspective, but also taking into
account questions of what constitutes a happy and fulfilled life. In particular
these latter issues were central to medicine before 1800 and relate to healthy
living as much as to questions connected specifically to old age. Thus whether
we speak of classic ways of training the athlete’s body, medieval religious
rites, the preHmodern obsession with regimen (rules for living a healthy life),
or the upperHclass fancy to visit spas, at the root of it all was a wish for
wellbeing, health and longevity.
The conference focuses especially (but not exclusively) on
the preHmodern period. Submissions for 20 minute papers should include a
250Hword abstract and a short CV. Subject to funding small travel grants might
be available for junior researchers.
Possible topics include:
- Histories of diet and dietetics, ‘sports’, spas and bathing, medication and lifeHelixirs, etc.
- The materiality of healthy living and ageing (pills, powders and elixirs, bath houses, exercise apparatus, scales and the like).
- Aesthetics and the history of cosmetic surgery
- Prognosis and historical efforts to chart life expectancy
- Relations between patients and doctors
- Ars Moriendi and resilience in the face of illness and death
- Healthy living and ageing outside academic medicine (quacks, alchemy, homeopathy)
- Narratives of ‘healthy ageing’
- The philosophical question of what constitutes a long and happy life
- Life cycles
- The understanding and application of the six ‘non-naturals’
- Healthy ageing and the arts
At the conference 5 keynote lectures will centre on the
non naturals, the areas defined by Hippocratic writers as basis of health
management and disease prevention:
- Food and Drink by Elizabeth Williams (Oklahoma State)
- Exercise and Rest by Onno van Nijf (Groningen)
- Sleep and Wakefulness by William Maclehose (UC London)
- Excretion and Retention by Michael Stolberg (Würzburg)
- Perturbations of the Mind & Emotions by Irena Metzler (Swansea)
Organisers: Rina Knoeff, Ruben Verwaal, Catrien Santing,
James Kennaway, Rolf ter Sluis. Submissions and queries should be sent to:
historiesofhealthyageing@gmail.com by 1 December 2016.