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Mediated Bodies

International conference
14. 15 and 16 September 2006
Faculty of Arts and Culture
Maastricht University
The Netherlands

CALL FOR PAPERS

There is no object of scientific investigation that is as difficult to 
consider a ‘mere’ object as the human body. People do not merely ‘have’ 
but ‘are’ their bodies. Accordingly, there is a strong mutual relationship 
between scientific, esp. medical conceptions and practices and the 
constitution and experience of the body in other cultural domains (i.e. 
religion, philosophy, are, popular culture etc.) and in every day life The 
visualisation of the body’s interior is particularly significant as it 
renders available what is both very nearby and inaccessible in daily 
experience. The way the body is dealt with, cared for, used, or sensed 
changes with how its interiority and boundaries are conceived of and vice 
versa. Therefore, the early modern body might be very different from that 
of the 21st century and the body in African medical practice might bear 
little resemblance to the corporeal object of European or American 
biomedicine. Bodily realities and experiences are produced as much as they 
are discovered and expressed in the interplay of mediating discourses and 
practice. Medical visualisation technologies are at the heart of this 
interplay.

The conference centers around the question of how (medical and / or 
technological) visualisations of the body interact with other discourses 
and practices in the mediation of human bodies.

This question is explored in 7 successive sessions, each dealing with 
specific visualisations of bodies and with particular historical or 
cultural contexts. For each of these sessions there is still place for 
several papers of 20 minutes. (You can find a description of the sessions 
in the attachment).

If you are interested please send an abstract of your contribution to Renée 
van de Vall, [log in to unmask], before 15 May 2006.