Illness: Narratives, Imagery, and Politics: Remarks on a Seminar, an Exhibition, and a Conference Cover Image

Illness: Narratives, Imagery, and Politics: Remarks on a Seminar, an Exhibition, and a Conference
Illness: Narratives, Imagery, and Politics: Remarks on a Seminar, an Exhibition, and a Conference

Author(s): Daniele Monticelli
Subject(s): Customs / Folklore, Cultural Anthropology / Ethnology, Culture and social structure , Health and medicine and law, Politics of History/Memory
Published by: Eesti Kirjandusmuuseum
Keywords: illness and metaphor; illness narratives; medical humanities; representation of suffering; the illness narratives; imagery; politics conference;

Summary/Abstract: The article uses the review of a seminar, an exhibition, and a graduate conference, which took place at Tallinn University in the 2020–2021 academic year, as an occasion to reflect on the different ways in which illness has been represented in literature, the arts, and film across the history of Western culture. The specific focus of the article is on the theoretical contribution of the humanities to a more complex and adequate understanding of the phenomenon of illness. The study of illness narratives reveals different patterns and strategies of constructing the illness experience into a coherent and meaningful story, but also the resistance that the disruptive impact of illness on our everyday lives poses to narrativisation. The complex historical imagery which endows the biological fact of being sick with additional cultural and social meaning has also to be critically investigated in the humanities and social sciences. Metaphors about illness and the use of illness as a socio-political metaphor have often had a nefarious impact on sick people as well as entire social groups and communities. This is why the article also considers illness in its relations with politics and power and describes various attempts to empower sick people in their relations with medical institutions and their social environment. The article ends with a review of the “Illness: Narratives, Imagery, Politics” graduate conference (27–28 January 2021), which is a good illustration of the many literary and artistic works and of the plurality of methods that can be used in the study of the illness phenomenon from a humanities perspective.

  • Issue Year: 2021
  • Issue No: 83
  • Page Range: 235-250
  • Page Count: 16
  • Language: English