3rd Global Conference
Making Sense of: Dying and Death
Thursday 2nd December - Saturday 4th December 2004
Vienna, Austria
This inter-disciplinary and multi-disciplinary research and
publications project aims to create a forum for examining the links
between living and dying, and some of the contradictions and paradoxes
which arise that we appear to accept without question.
For 2004, special preference will be given to papers dealing with
issues surrounding the death of the unborn (e.g., stillbirth,
miscarriage, pre-natal death, death in utero) and death by violence
(to self as well as others). These issues – and the links between them
- have so far been largely neglected in interdisciplinary conferences
and publications. Yet it is only in such settings that the arbitrary
curtailment of human life can be fully explored in all its forms and
implications. The Steering Committee wish to encourage a forum which
offers the possibility of bringing to the fore much of the full
significance of these matters for the human condition today.
Papers, presentations, reports and workshops are also warmly invited
on any of the following indicative themes (or their combinations):
1. Kinds of Deaths: for instance, euthanasia, abortion, suicide,
homicide, neonatal and infant death, accidents, natural disasters,
sudden death, terminal illness/death, capital punishment, acts of
terrorism; death of a child, parent, spouse.
2. Philosophical, Ethical and Religious Issues in Dying and Death ;
the nature of dying and death (e.g. does an aborted foetus die?);
philosophies of dying and death; grounds for justifying and/or
condoning death (e.g., suicide, euthanasia); the difference between
seeking death and facing death bravely. When is living to be feared
more than death - or vice versa? Facing, or even choosing, death in
order to kill others. Concepts of afterlife and their influence on the
dying, theologies of death, near death experiences; faith and
secularism in death rituals; the role of hope, expiation and
forgiveness.
3. Bereavement; Grief, loss and anger; ‘models' and theories of grief
and their adequacy with respect to different kinds of deaths; can
grief be shared? Grief counselling and grief therapy; forms of
remembrance, sites of remembrance, what do they reveal and what might
they conceal?
4. The Representation of Dying and Death - art, all forms of
literature, cinema, music, radio and television; death and dying in
children's literature; children's concepts of mortality, violence and
death.
5. Contradictions and Paradoxes: examples may include sudden death Vs
our ability or desire to postpone death; horror at genocide Vs our
appetite for films about ending lives in violent ways; respect for
horror and grief Vs the tendency to wallow in their “mediatised”
forms; terrorism Vs warfare; being informed Vs being de-sensitised by
the media.
6. Technology, Dying and Death; the impact of advances in medical
technology; social expectations of medical possibilities; the
double-edged sword - technology as helper Vs technology as killer
(e.g., lethal injection, vaginal aspiration, gas chambers).
7. The Management of Dying and Death. Hospitals and the limits of
responsibility, e.g. (the imposition of) intensive care and aggressive
treatment for dying patients; unacknowledged euthanasia; ageing and
dying; care homes or waiting rooms for death; the hospice movement;
limits to the humanising of death; whose decisions?
8. Legal Issues in Dying and Death; legal definitions of death, court
rulings and decisions, the right to die, natural death and brain death
statutes, advance directives and living wills; organ donation, organ
transplantation; who ‘owns’ the corpse?
Papers will be considered on any related theme. 300 word abstracts
should be submitted by Friday 3rd September 2004. If accepted for
presentation, 8 page draft conference papers should be submitted by
Friday 19th November 2004. Abstracts should be submitted to
Dr Rob Fisher and will be reviewed by the Organising Committee;
Organising Committee:
Mira Crouch
School of Sociology
The University of New South Wales
Sydney,Australia
Rob Fisher
Inter-Disciplinary.Net
Priory House, Freeland
Oxfordshire,United Kingdom
Asa Kasher
Laura Schwarz-Kipp Professor of Professional Ethics and Philosophy of
Practice and Professor of Philosophy
Tel-Aviv University, Israel
Abstracts should be submitted by email in Word, WordPerfect, PDF or
RTF formats; alternatively the abstract may be placed in the body of
the email. Please send submissions to:
Dr Rob Fisher
rf@inter-disciplinary.net
A themed hard copy volume has been published from the first meeting of
this project; an ISBN eBook has been published and a hard copy themed
volumed is in preparation from the second conference. All papers
accepted for and presented at this conference will be published in an
ISBN eBook. Selected papers accepted for and presented at the
conference will be published in a hard copy themed volume(s).
For further information about the project, please visit:
http://www.inter-disciplinary.net/mso/dd/dd.htm
For further details about the conference, please visit:
http://www.inter-disciplinary.net/mso/dd/dd3/dd3cfp.htm
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