ERC The Healthy Self as Body Capital & Centre d'Etudes des mondes
Russe
et d'Europe centrale (EHESS) International Conference
Televising the socialist body. Projections of health and welfare on the
socialist and post-socialist screen
18-20 June 2020, Paris, France
Television prospered upon a tension between education and leisure, which
was especially acute in a socialist context. Televisions began to appear in
homes in Eastern Europe after its stabilization as a socialist “block”
dominated by the USSR. However diverse by nature and history, all the socialist
regimes shared common strategies of mass propaganda, i.e. the intensive use of
media to convert people and transform collective/individual behaviours.
Television was supposed to be a new tool allowing direct normative shaping of
every citizen, but also blamed in some circles for stimulating the
disarticulation of the class/work/political collective. Moreover, this tool was
uneasy to master: the professionals trained to produce an efficient TV
discourse mainly focused on socialist progress (i.e. omitting shortcomings and
problems from the picture), and the spectators learned to read it (i.e. to
select the information) at the very same time. Finally, crossed communication
around programs helped the citizens to identify themselves with a Soviet
way-of-life more “normal” than in the past 40 years.
The specificity of the Eastern case in the broader history of European
television and the stakes of “socialist” body values merit both a nuanced
assessment. The development of television coincided with a period in which
ideas about the public’s health, the problems public health faced and the
solutions that could be offered, were changing. The threat posed by infectious
diseases and famines was receding, to be replaced by chronic diseases, which
were linked to lifestyle and individual behaviour. Early in the 1920s’ Soviet
Russia, and then on a large scale after World War II, the state turned into a
welfare state.
Lifelong medical care and social security were granted. In exchange
citizens had to adopt new hygienic habits and healthy conduct: every citizen
now had the right, and the duty, to be “healthful.” The state commissioned the
educational institutions and the mass media to purge popular unscientific
perceptions of medicine and impose an expert conception of the body. In Eastern
Europe, the political power emphasized the necessity of a collective reshaping
of the body, defining a “socialist” body (still to outline in general and in
its national variations) that contrasted with its “corrupt” Western
counterpart.
Watching TV in the 1950s-1990s was part of a shift towards more
sedentary lifestyles, and also a vehicle through which products that were
damaging to health, such as alcohol, cigarettes and unhealthy food, could be
advertised to the public. In the Eastern part of Europe, where food was less
scarce, alcohol and cigarettes affordable, the states endeavoured
simultaneously to promote an ambiguous “socialist” well being and fight the
usual “social diseases”, encouraged consumption while condemning consumerism.
Throughout the age of television, health and body-related subjects have been
presented and diffused into the public sphere via a multitude of forms, ranging
from short films in health education programmes to school television; from
professional training videos to TV ads; from documentary and reality TV shows
to TV news; but also as complementary VHS and similar video formats.
Spectators were invited not only to be TV consuming audiences, but also
how shows and TV set-ups integrated and sometimes pretended to transform the
viewer into a participant of the show. TV programmes spread the conviction that
subjects had the ability to shape their own body.
Bodies and health on television have not been extensively researched, in
particular in the socialist and transition to market-economy contexts. The
conference seeks to analyse how television and its evolving
formats—contemporary, similar and yet differing in national broadcast
contexts—expressed and staged bodies and health from local, regional, national
and international perspectives. The conference seeks to better understand the
role that TV, as a modern visual mass media, has played in what may be cast as
the transition from a national bio-political public health paradigm at the
beginning of the twentieth century, to alternative societal forms of the late
twentieth century when (supposedly) “better” and “healthier” lives were
increasingly shaped by market forces.
We are looking for proposals that will answer such questions as (but not
limited to): How should we understand the relationship between TV and public health
in a socialist and post-socialist context?
Could we identify a common trend and transfers between televisions’
treatment of health in different socialist countries and contexts? What are the
key changes and continuities over time and place? How does thinking about the
relationship between public health and TV change our understanding of both? How
were shifts in public health, problems, policies and practices represented on
TV? How were institutions concerned with the public’s health presented – and
staged – on TV broadcasts? How was TV used to improve or hinder public health?
What aspects of public health were represented on TV, and what were not? In
what way was TV different from other forms of mass media in relation to public
health? How did the public respond to health messages on TV? To what extent can
the notion of “market” be used in the socialist context to define the
relationship between spectators/patients and television/doctors?
The conference aims to bring together scholars from different fields
(such as, but not limited to, history, history of science, history of medicine,
anthropology, sociology, communication, media and film studies, television
studies) working on the history of television in East European countries and
USSR/Russia in the post-Stalinist era and the years following the collapse of
the Socialist Bloc. Papers might focus on one national, regional or even local
framework, or may be comparative in approach. Indeed, considerations of the
history of health-related (audio-) visuals as a history of transfer, as
entangled history or with a comparative perspective inside the Socialist Bloc
and/or with Western counterparts, are welcome. The organizers welcome
contributions with a strong historical impetus from all social and cultural
sciences.
The conference will take place in Paris, 18-20 June 2020. The conference
organizers are able to provide accommodation in Paris during the conference, as
well as limited travel funding, upon application and in accordance to need.
Applications for presentation of approx. 3000 characters as well as a
short resume are requested by 20 December 2019 by e-mail to: asumpf@unistra.fr
The applicants will receive an answer by 31 January 2020.
The healthy self as body capital: individuals, market-based societies
and body politics in visual twentieth century Europe (BodyCapital) project is
directed by Christian Bonah at the Université de Strasbourg and Anja Laukötter
at the Max Planck Institute for Human Development, Berlin. The project is
funded by the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union’s
Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme (Advanced Grant agreement No
694817).
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