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Call for Papers

Theme: Death
Subtitle: The Cultural Meaning of the End of Life
Type: Graduate Conference 2013
Institution: Centre for the Arts in Society (LUCAS), Leiden University
Location: Leiden (Netherlands)
Date: 24.–25.1.2013
Deadline: 15.11.2012

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Death is a defining factor in the explorations of our subjectivity, 
art, history,politics, and many other aspects of our social 
interactions and perceptions of the world. In the modern age, 
conceptions of death have continued to shift and evolve, yet our 
perceptions are still fueled by an instinctive fear of the end of
life.

In recent decades, we have rebelled against the threat of death by 
inventing new technologies and medicines that have drastically 
increased our life expectancy – diseases and disabilities are
gradually disappearing. Some believe that one day we will completely
conquer the aging process, and ultimately death. Life can now be seen
as a new form of commodity, a material object that we can trade,
sell, or buy.

Despite our attempts to shut-out death or overcome its inevitability, 
the end of life has remained a visible and unavoidable aspect of our 
society. From antiquity to the present day, perceptions of death have 
been represented through various different mediums: visual culture, 
art, literature, music, historical writing, cinema,religious symbols, 
national anniversaries, and public expressions of mourning.

This conference aims to explore how death has been represented and 
conceptualized, from classical antiquity to the modern age, and the 
extent to which our perceptions and understandings of death have 
changed (or remained the same) over time. The wide scope of this 
theme reflects the historical range of LUCAS's (previously called 
LUICD) three research programs (Classics and Classical Civilization, 
Medieval and Early Modern Studies and Modern and Contemporary 
Studies), as well as the intercontinental and interdisciplinary focus 
of many of the institute's research projects.

Proposals

The LUCAS Graduate Conference welcomes papers from all disciplines 
within the humanities. The topic of your proposal may address the 
concept of death from a cultural, historical, classical, artistic, 
literary, cinematic, political, economic, or social viewpoint.

Questions that might be raised include:
How have different cultures imagined the end of life? What is the
role of art (literature, or cinema) in cultural conceptions of death?
How might historical or contemporary conceptualizations of death be
related to the construction of our subjectivity and cultural
identity? What is the cultural meaning(s) of death? To what extent
has modern warfare changed our perceptions of death? How is death
presented in the media and how has this changed? In what ways has
religion influenced our reflections on death and the afterlife?

Please send your proposal (max. 300 words) to present a 20-minute 
paper to <[email protected]>. The deadline for proposals
is 15 November, 2012. You will be notified whether or not your paper
has been selected by 1 December, 2012.

As with the previous LUCAS Graduate Conference (2011), a selection of 
papers will be published in the conference proceedings. For those who 
attend the conference, there will be a registration fee of EU 45 to 
cover the cost of lunches, coffee breaks, and other conference 
materials. Unfortunately we cannot offer financial support at this 
time.

If you have any questions regarding the conference and/or the 
proposals, please do not hesitate to contact the organizing committee 
at: [email protected]. Further details will be available 
online in the Fall.

Keynote Speakers:
Professor Joanna Woodall, Courtauld Institute of Art, United Kingdom
Professor Rosi Braidotti, University of Utrecht, Netherlands

The organizing committee:
Odile Bodde
Maarten Jansen
David Louwrier
Jenny Weston




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