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.