Call for Papers SLSAeu 2025
The Lifespan: Perspectives on Ageing and the Life Course
from the Medical Humanities, the Health Sciences and Age Studies
Conference of the European
Society for Literature, Science and the Arts (SLSAeu) and The Sciences of Ageing and the
Culture of Youth (SAACY)
4th–6th June 2025
The Great Hall, King’s College London
Ageing is too often seen as an inevitable period of decline
at the end of life. The UKRI-funded research programme The Sciences of Ageing and the
Culture of Youth (SAACY), based at the Centre
for the Humanities and Health at King’s College London, looks at how we can
overcome this cultural pessimism by understanding ageing as a lifelong process
rather than something that happens at the end of our lives. Older age poses
challenges and opportunities just like every other phase in life.
This conference is interested in the synergistic capacities
of ageing research across the humanities, social and medical/life sciences
invested in ageing as a lifelong process. SLSAeu and SAACY join
for this conference to share research at the many intersections of science,
literature and the arts.
Ageing does
come with material changes of the body, varying levels of energy and the
possibility of ill health. But the decline narrative that aligns ageing with
disease and evokes anxieties about vulnerability and dependence is only
partly informed by the biological reality of bodily change across the lifespan.
It is also directed by cultural and wider societal perceptions of what ageing
means.
Biological
ageing captures the impact of lifelong inequalities connected to the categories
of difference that age studies are interested in; similarly, as a product and
reflection of cultural values and beliefs, literature is essential for
capturing the stories about ageing we live by. These stories, in turn,
influence how we age, biologically, psychologically, socially; and they inform how
we approach care, do research, and plan our lives on a changing planet.
Achieving
attitudinal change to ageing would have far-reaching socio-economic and political implications
– for how we retire, treat and care for older people, fund research and care,
and understand intergenerational relations. It would break down barriers to
opportunity across the age spectrum and contribute to healthier ageing for all.
‘The Lifespan’ wants to
generate conversations between predictive and quantitative sciences and
research approaches that describe and contextualise.
This three-day conference will be held at King’s College
London. We are keen to foster conversations across disciplines within panels
and invite contributions on lifespan/lifecourse approaches to ageing from
disciplines such as Anthropology, Cultural Studies, Languages and Literatures,
Narrative Medicine, Dementia Studies, Geriatrics, Gerontology, Neuroscience,
Psychiatry, Public Health, Disability Studies, Epidemiology, Evolutionary
Science and Medicine, Gender Studies, Philosophy, Critical Posthumanism, Postgenomic
Sciences and Health Economics. We have a strong preference for papers to be
presented in person, while hoping to be able to provide limited hybrid options.
Confirmed plenary speakers and round table discussants
include:
Sally
Chivers, Trent University, Canada
Ulrike Draesner,
Leipzig University, Germany
Des O’Neill,
Trinity College Dublin, Republic of Ireland
Susan
Pickard, University of Liverpool, UK
Oliver Robinson, Imperial College London, UK
Kavita Sivaramakrishnan, Columbia University, USA
Aagje Swinnen, Maastricht University, Netherlands
Conference
website: https://www.kcl.ac.uk/events/slsaeu-2025saacy-conference
For informal
queries: SLSAeu-SAACY-Conference@kcl.ac.uk
Registration and bursaries covering travel and
accommodation
Details for the registration will be provided in due course,
with the Conference registration set at £175.
SLSAeu and SAACY are committed to supporting MA/MSc and PhD
students and other Early Career Researchers (ECRs) to present their work. We
expect to be able to provide at least 20 bursaries to contribute to travel and
accommodation for ECRs. If you wish to be considered for a bursary your
abstract must be submitted by Monday 20th January 2025. Expenses
for travel and accommodation can only be reimbursed if we have received
receipts by Monday 16th June 2025.
Abstracts
Please submit your 250-word abstract alongside a 50-word
biography by 20th January 2025. Formats include paper presentations
(20 minutes) and discipline-crossing panels (including participants from three
disciplines, one of whom the moderator). We also encourage sector-crossing
panels that include artists and writers, and welcome art events. Proposals for
discipline-crossing panels spanning sciences/medicine, social sciences, the
humanities, and the arts are especially welcome.
Please use this online form, if you wish to
submit an individual abstract. As the moderator of a proposed panel, please use
this online form for
submitting the panel proposal and abstracts for and on behalf of you panel
members. The forms ask for contact details and offer the option to express
interest in a travel/accommodation bursary. If you’d like to be considered for
one of these, please also complete the box asking for a short (50-word)
statement as to how you identify as an ECR.
Key Dates
Abstracts due: 20th January 2025
Decision on talks and bursaries: mid-February 2025
Registration opens mid-February 2025
Deadline registration to confirm talk: 17th
March 2025
Publication of conference programme: 1 April 2025
Registration closes 30 April 2025
Conference: 4th–6th June 2025
Conference organisers: