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Dear Colleagues,
Friday 29th is the last day to submit a paper for the following session on
"imagining disabilities in multiple agents" - we hope this session will
encourage new and novel ways of thinking and reflecting on how disability
and impairments are imagined in analogous ways to think about technology,
the environment, performance and in interesting ways in different agents.
Please get in touch if you would like to present but are unsure if the
paper is suitable.
Best Wishes,
Kathleen
Information below
>
>-----
>Dear Colleagues,
>
>I ask your assistance in circulating the following CFP, for the
>Association of Social Anthropologists Conference, "Vital powers and
>politics: human interactions with living things," University of Wales
>Trinity Saint David, 13th-16th Sept 2011. Panel Title: Imagining
>disabilities in multiple agents
>
>Short Abstract: Disabled people are often imagined as incomplete
>entities, lacking in bodies, capacities or sociality. In the construction
>of disability various techniques and intervention technologies are
>generated to "complete" or "assist" with what are considered
>'impairments'.
>
>Long abstract: Bodies are considered whole, but the disabled body is often
>imagined as incomplete or lacking. Nonhuman agents (such as medical
>interventions, artificial limbs, animals and robots) are called upon to
>act therapeutically as completion tools. To do this, the disabled bodies
>and other kinds of socialities are reimagined in new ways. Yet what is
>often lacking in the scholarship is the how tools and techniques are as
>much inspired by themes in disabilities as they are created to alleviate
>perceived problems. Disabilities and impairments inspire the creation of
>technologies, directly (as in tools to assist), but also indirectly, in
>the ways that analogies are often made between persons with disabilities
>and impairments and machines, robots and animals. This session will
>address these themes by exploring a range of what are considered
>'impairments' across different human groups and the multiple agents
>(organic and inorganic and human and nonhuman) drawn upon to
>therapeutically assist them, but also how disabilities and impairments
>inspire new ways of thinking about machines, robots and animals.
>
>We would like to invite papers that address these themes and welcome
>interdisciplinary perspectives for paper proposals.
>
>
>
>The CFP deadline is 29 April 2011. Details on abstract submission and
>conference participation are available at the ASA website:
>http://www.theasa.org/conferences/asa11/index.shtml.
>
>Cross-disciplinary submissions are entirely welcomed! For further
>information on the session, please contact me directly at
>[log in to unmask]
>Best Wishes,
>
>Kathleen Richardson
>
>
--
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