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CFP: Edited Collection: The Neuroscientific Turn in the Humanities and Social Sciences
| Publication Date: | 2009-10-30 (Archive) |
| Date Submitted: |
2009-08-19 |
| Announcement ID: |
170108 |
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From economics to English, religious studies to recreation, neuroscience has become the latest theoretical tool for analyzing society and culture. While there has been some backlash against this trend, research continues to emerge in areas of neurotheology, neuromarketing, neuroethics, neuroaesthetics, the neurohumanities, and neurohistory to name but a few. We are seeking essays for an edited collection that analyze and interrogate this recent neuroscientific turn in the humanities and social sciences. We are particularly interested to hear from researchers who apply the neuro- to their own disciplinary work.
Essays might engage with the following questions: why has there been a shift to using neuroscience as an epistemological framework and/or theoretical tool in the humanities and social sciences? What kind of arguments does it allow / foreclose / refute? How is this trend related to the “decade of the brain”? How do visualization technologies like fMRI shape or limit the neuroscientific turn? Is the neuroscientific turn interdiscplinary, cross-disciplinary, multi-disciplinary? What are the rights and responsibilities of such inter/cross/multiple-disciplinary research? Should this neuro- research fall under the purview of neuroethics? What roles do print and digital media play in the development and distribution of this trend? Why and how do the humanities and the social sciences need the neurosciences? What can the neurosciences learn from this trend in the humanities and the social sciences? How might these fields combine into a discipline of their own?
Related fields include:
Neuroaesthetics
Social Neuroscience (neuro- anthropology/sociology)
Neuroethics (philosophy and bioethics)
Neurohumanities
Neuroeconomics
Neuromarketing
Neurotheology (spiritual neuroscience)
Neurohistory
Neuropolitics
Neuropsychology
Neuropsychiatry
Deadline:
Please submit a 300 word abstract and a brief (1-3 pg) CV to both editors by Oct 30, 2009
Editors:
Melissa Littlefield, University of Illinois (mml@illinois.edu)
Jenell Johnson, Louisiana State University (jjohn@lsu.edu)
Final versions of the essays will be tentatively due by June 1, 2010
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Jenell Johnson
237E Allen Hall
Louisiana State University
Baton Rouge, LA 70805 Email: jjohn@lsu.edu
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