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[Commlist] Call for chapters - collection on Religion, Spirituality, and Health
Thu Jul 04 20:14:49 GMT 2019
Routledge special collection on Religion, Spirituality, and Health.
Call for chapter submissions -- all scholars including MCS welcome to
submit.
Working title: Wellness amidst experiences of chronicity: A spiritual
and faith-based exploration Expression of interest of abstract (200
words) due Sept. 15, 2019
While the context of the ‘chronic’ condition is most well known as
medical and treatment oriented, this collection will reflect on chronic
health and wellness beyond the diagnosis of chronic medical conditions.
The authors will bring a critical lens for the exploration of cultural
and daily experiences of various forms of chronic conditions and
wellness in relation to practices of spirituality and faith. Chronicity
as a framework, with a focus on the meaning-centered aspects of illness
experiences over time, will set the stage for this collection,
considering that chronic conditions draw together developed and
developing countries, the global North and South, East or West. This
inter- and transdisciplinary collection invites contributors and leading
scholars in the cultural and social sciences, medical professionals,
psychotherapists, occupational therapists, physiotherapists, nurses, and
practitioners of complementary and alternative across the fields of
anthropology, sociology, psychology, health education, and social work
to understand, rethink, and transform spiritual and faith-based striving
in health care. We take as our theoretical point of departure the
phenomenological and hermeneutic, meaning-making traditions, as the
co-authors share a concern for the manifold struggles that abound amidst
living with and management of chronic conditions. This collection is
innovative in that it explores spirituality and faith in a way that
doesn’t presuppose benefits or pitfalls, but rather, how people explore
their own day-to-day practices in the context of chronic conditions. The
collection is not designed to place value on any specific type of faith
or spiritual practice, but rather focusses on peoples’ lived experience,
attending to both the social and individual, structural and existential.
Topics of interest for your submission may include, but are not limited to:
• A global focus on practices of spirituality or faith, and how these
may intersect with cultural and individual experiences of chronic health
and wellness.
• Faith-based and spiritual practices that are transformed,
questioned or challenged amidst living with chronic conditions;
practices that may shape or inform embodied forms coping, resistance,
help-seeking practices, or self-care amidst what has been posited as
chronicity.
• A connection between faith-based and spiritual practices that
impact or shape the interpersonal domains of social suffering,
potentially also with a focus on the “social technologies.”
• Issues around “quality of care” understood in the spiritual
contexts of chronicity, including contradictory faith practices between
clients and professionals.
• What is most at stake for people who draw on faith or spirituality
in their management of chronic conditions, and particularly the moral
contours of daily experience; and in relation to family and the
professionals they are seeking help from?
• Exploring how spiritual and faith-based resources are mobilized in
contexts of chronicity for acts of social justice, change, and societal
transformation? Is this a political endeavor and if so, in what way?
What can be gained from this through a political sphere?
• Peoples’ relationships to temporality and how they may be shaped by
modes of spiritual and faith-based striving.
• Explorations of narrative and how the story about living with
chronic conditions I told in context of spiritual or faith-based coping?
Further details:
The collection editors (details below) have been invited by and spoken
directly with the content editor at Routledge who has expressed serious
interest in the project, and has invited us to submit a formal proposal
once we have chapter contributors confirmed. If interested to contribute
a chapter to this collection, please submit a 300-word abstract (or
thereabouts) outlining the basic vision, introduction, methods, results,
and discussion or conclusion sections (if relevant) of the intended
chapter, to the collection editors. We are inviting abstract submissions
from now until September 15th 2019 at which time we intend to complete
the full proposal to Routledge with contributing author and chapter
details. We then expect the submission of authors’ final chapters would
be received in the spring of 2020 and be around 6000-9000 words complete
with references and accompanying details. We welcome both theoretical
and empirical contributions, although the priority will be given to
qualitative pieces that focus on aspects of daily lived experiences of
spiritual and faith-based practices amidst chronic conditions as loosely
depicted above. Any further questions can be directed to the collection
editors.
About the collection editors:
Andrew R. Hatala, PhD, is a practicing member of the Canadian Baha’i
community and a medical and psychological anthropologist with interest
in cultural psychiatry, spirituality, and health psychology and
currently an Assistant Professor in the Department of Community Health
Sciences (Rady Faculty of Health Sciences) at the University of
Manitoba. His published works and research focus on qualitative
methodologies, mental health, Indigenous healing and epistemology,
Indigenous nosology of mental illness and disorder, culture and
spirituality, and resilience and well-being among Indigenous youth
populations.
Email: (andrew.hatala /at/ umanitoba.ca)
Website: https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Andrew_Hatala
Kerstin Roger, PhD, is an Associate Professor in the Department of
Community Health Sciences (Rady Faculty of Health Sciences) at the
University of Manitoba. Her current research focuses on family and
community interfacing with informal and formal health care systems
including topics in aging, chronic illness, spirituality, HIV, and wellness.
Email: (kerstin.roger /at/ umanitoba.ca)
Website: https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Kerstin_Roger
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