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Postgraduate scholars across the University of Oxford are conducting research into cultural, psychological and social aspects of death and mortality. This conference, running online over two afternoons on the 19th and 26th of November, offers an insight into some of their work and findings.
On this second conference day, three successive panels will reflect on three overarching questions and death and the existential questions it raises. A range of scholars will present their research on death and identity, asking how the experience of bereavement or reflection on one’s own mortality might shape selfhood, gender and class relations now and in the past. Philosophers and historians will explore feelings of grief and their representation in contemporary popular culture versus in historic literature. Lastly, a variety of artistic representations of dying, ageing and illness will be discussed, from contemporary Western images of terminal illness to twelfth-century Byzantine death inscriptions, exploring how death and pain are visualised in different societies at different times.
All are encouraged to attend and join the discussion – please contact eleanor.kerfoot@balliol.ox.ac.uk for the conference programme and list of abstracts.
This conference has been generously funded by the Balliol Interdisciplinary Institute.
Organiser: Eleanor Kerfoot, Balliol College, eleanor.kerfoot@balliol.ox.ac.uk
Meeting Link: bit.ly/3eS6LQp
Meeting ID: 898 3352 9286
Passcode: 0ZKaKs
Day One link: talks.ox.ac.uk/talks/id/31f7f426-83bb-4721-aaae-355b7f5dcbd4
Organiser: Eleanor Kerfoot, Faculty of History
Co-organiser: Edward Jones, Faculty of Classics