Conference & Call for Papers: Illness Narrative Retold – Diversity, Temporality, & Digitization
Sunday, November 16, 2025
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Posted by: International Narrative Practices Association
About the conference: Stories of illness are often understood as attempts to tame, navigate, and make sense of the ‘wreckage’ or ‘biographical disruption’ that the experience of serious illness or patienthood may occasion. Within illness narrative research, the storyteller is seen as a seriously wounded individual trying to master the disruptive existential event of falling ill – frequently with the (sometimes impossible) hope of restoring health. This dominant “crisis model” has shaped scholarly assumptions about what an illness narrative is, who can tell it, and for what reasons, as well as how to approach it analytically.
Against the background of this well-established tradition, this two-day interdisciplinary conference asks the key questions of where the academic field of illness narrative research is currently moving and how new experiences, discourses, mediations, and technologies shape the way illness narratives are told today. In other words, we wish to explore the multiplicity of ways in which illness narratives are currently understood, articulated, circulated, and used.
The conference particularly focuses on how new ideas, practices, and configurations of illness narratives emerge in cultural contexts shaped by anticipatory health technologies and the growing prevalence of chronic conditions, neurodiversity, mental illness, and increased medicalization. How are illness narratives crafted and shared if suffering is not only an acute and dramatic event but also something that lingers, changes from day to day, or looms as a potential future? What does it mean when illness and health become increasingly entangled and difficult to separate, when the narrator is not a patient in any conventional sense, or when diagnoses are replaced by risks and probabilities?
Another focus area for the conference is the public circulation of illness narratives on social media, in broadcast media, and on streaming platforms, which turn individual stories of illness and suffering into public concerns and raise the question of story ownership. This concern is also pertinent in forms of distributed storytelling where experiences and narratives are shared across, e.g., families, generations, and intimate relations. In this vein, we also welcome papers that investigate how illness narratives are told by multiple narrators, by relatives, or by (genetically) at-risk subjects entangled in family histories of pain.
The conference welcomes researchers at all career stages working within the fields of illness narrative, health communication, medical humanities, narrative medicine, and media and cultural studies. When:June 1,2 2026 *Registration opens February 2026 Where: Venue: Aarhus University, Conference Center, Fredrik Nielsens Vej 4 , 8000 Aarhus C CALL FOR PAPERS: Call for participation in a conference on illness narratives at Aarhus University, focusing on diversity, temporality, and digitization. Conference Details
Dates: 1–2 June 2026 Abstract submission deadline: 01 February 2026 Notification of acceptance: 15 February 2026 Abstract length: Max. 300 words Submission: Send abstracts and a short bio to noraksn@cc.au.dk Organizers: Professor Carsten Stage and Assistant Professor Ann-Katrine Schmidt Nielsen Funding: Supported by the research project "Genetic hauntings" (IRDF 2023–2026).
Keynote Speakers
Angela Woods (Durham University): Discusses voice and testimony in the context of generative AI. Danielle Spencer (Columbia University): Explores metagnosis and the retelling of illness narratives. Stefania Vicari (University of Sheffield): Examines social media's role in health and illness narratives.
Conference Focus The conference aims to explore the evolving landscape of illness narratives, emphasizing:
The impact of chronic conditions, neurodiversity, and medicalization on narrative construction. The role of social media and digital platforms in shaping public illness narratives and issues of story ownership. Collaborative storytelling across families and generations, and critical approaches to narrative metaphors.
Themes for Contributions Submissions are encouraged on topics including:
Critical approaches to illness narratives, chronic and mental illness, disability, and neurodivergence. The intersection of illness narratives with risk technologies, gender, and collective storytelling. The influence of visual media, journalism, and professional contexts on illness narratives.
Contact: Anna-Katrine Schmidt Neilsen- noraksn@cc.au.dk
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