Objects of Psychiatry. Between thing-making, reification and personhood

Objects of Psychiatry. Between thing-making, reification and personhood

Organizer
Interdisciplinary research project: “Schizophrenia”: Reception, semantic shift, and criticism of a concept in the 20th century. University of Zurich, Psychiatric Hospital Zurich University
Venue
Psychiatrische Universitätsklinik Zürich
Location
Zürich
Country
Switzerland
From - Until
08.06.2016 - 11.06.2016
Deadline
01.12.2015
By
Marina Lienhard

Psychiatry is situated at the interface between the natural sciences, the social sciences and the humanities. The ensuing hybrid nature invites inter- and transdisciplinary research approaches. This conference aims to give a platform to such approaches asking the central question: Who or what is, becomes or constitutes psychiatry’s object?

Taking its starting point from the study of concrete research objects – case notes, images, films and texts, diagnostic concepts and labels, research instruments and therapeutic proce-dures, doctors and patients – it invites reflection on how objects are related to subjects, selves and personhood. Can this relationship be conceptualized along the lines of the tradi-tional Western dichotomy between object and subject or does it have to be fundamentally re-thought? And is it linked to other classical dichotomies e.g. the one between matter and meaning? Is there a role for agents as object-, subject-, self- or thing-makers?

OBJECTS OF PSYCHIATRY takes up current debates within psychiatry namely the debate about the reification of psychiatric diagnoses like “schizophrenia”, but also deliberations about autonomy, human rights and participation. At the same time, it considers how the hu-manities situate psychiatric objects in wider societal contexts and discourses and bring into focus their historical genesis and configuration.

Drawing together heterogeneous traditions of thought and methods, it invites participants to build – and to reflect on – transdisciplinary bridges between sciences and humanities as well as between theory and practice. Contributions are invited, but not limited to, perspectives from psychiatry, philosophy, psychology, linguistics, history, history of science and medicine, neurosciences, as well as cultural, literary, film & visual studies. Medical Humanities approaches are welcome.

Programm

KEYNOTE SPEAKERS

Prof. Dr. Peter Galison,
Harvard University
Prof. Dr. Dagmar Herzog,
City University of New York
Prof. Dr. Lutz Jäncke,
University of Zurich
Prof. Dr. Norman Sartorius,
University of Geneva

Contact (announcement)

Veronika Rall

Seminar für Filmwissenschaft; Affolternstrasse 56

veronika.rall@fiwi.uzh.ch

http://www.schizophrenie.uzh.ch/conference2016.html