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Final CFP:  Health and Discourse Across Scales



The philosopher Ian Hacking has criticized what he calls “the metaphor of
‘discourse’” for failing to attend to “what people do, how they live, [and]
the larger world of the material existence that they inhabit” (Hacking
1998, p. 86). However, discourse is more than the simple analysis of
language, texts, and representations.  Instead, studies of discourse unpack
the ways in which representations and practices are mutually constructed
and reinforced on a daily basis.  Within health geography, both the areas
of medical humanities/narrative medicine and critical global health are
engaging with this more inclusive understanding of discourse, unpacking the
ways in which discourses of illness and health are produced and enacted,
and the effects that such discourses have on the lives of individuals, the
development of policy, and the practice of medicine.  Attention within
medical humanities/narrative medicine and critical global health, however,
has largely been directed at different scales, with medical
humanities/narrative medicine largely concerned with individuals and
critical global health particularly directed toward projects at community
and national scales.



In this session we seek to foster a conversation across scales, drawing on
both traditions to explore the ways in which health is itself imbued with
discourse at all scales.  Possible themes may include:  health
communication between expert and lay populations, political ecology of
health discourses, postcolonial health/medicine, caring across scale,
multiscalar methods in health geography, structural determinants of health,
discursive constructions of health and disease, community health
narratives, discourses of disability, etc.  While discourse is a main
topical focus of the session, we welcome papers that employ methods
extending beyond discourse analysis narrowly construed.



Please send titles and abstracts (up to 250 words) to Skye Naslund (
[log in to unmask]) and Maggie Wilson ([log in to unmask]) by Sunday, November 6th for
consideration.


*This session is sponsored by the Health and Medical Geography Specialty
Group. *