- Event start date:
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12:00
- Event end date:
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15:00
- Event location:
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Educa building, room E200, Tulliportinkatu 1, Joensuu Campus, Finland
- Additional information:
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Joensuu
- Contact information:
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Meri-Tuuli Hirvonen
+358504679474
- Add to calendar:
The research group Safety and Security in Diverse Society is organising a conference at the University of Eastern Finland in Joensuu on 27–28 August 2026.
The theme, Creative Encounters with(in) Health and Illness in Social and Cultural Studies, invites explorations of vulnerability both as a research topic and as something that researchers themselves may experience. We recognise the borders between health and illness as socially constructed and embodied, and as sites of reflexive and critical research practices that both produce and challenge these constructions.
The programme includes two keynote presentations:
- The first keynote Exploring crip spacetime via video art and autoethnograpy. Rhythms, repetitiveness and enduring yet constantly transforming reality of chronic illness is by Docent Anna Leppo, Dr Salome Tuomaala-Özdemir, and MA Iida Putkuri, who represent the project Realm of the Sick – Exploring the Agency and Participation of People Living with Chronic Illness. They will present a video art work based on their research findings and discuss their work with the audience. Read more about the project here.
- The second keynote Ruumiin runot – haavoittuvuus tutkijan omassa ruumiissa is by Dr Kirsi Törmi, whose presentation will focus on vulnerability as experienced in a researcher’s own body. Dr Törmi’s research and artistic projects have explored themes of encounter, interaction, and the complexities of power and responsibility, with a particular focus on wellbeing and working cultures in the field of performing arts.
Please see underneath for more detailed descriptions of the keynote lectures and their presenters.
We also welcome participants to present and discuss their ongoing or published research in a supportive and collegial environment. In addition, the programme includes social opportunities for sharing experiences with other researchers. The conference is open to both scholars and practitioners across Finland and internationally.
Our sincere aim is to create an atmosphere of safety and comfort that allows participants to be present as whole individuals, supports wellbeing at work, and encourages both questions and critical reflection on the research topics as well as the nature of academic working environment we seek to cultivate.
On Thursday, the seminar will be held in English, while on Friday, we will operate mostly in Finnish. Both days it is possible to ask questions and make comments in both languages. Participants can attend free of charge onsite in Joensuu or join in the keynote lectures virtually. It is not permitted to record or film the keynotes. The workshops will convene onsite in Joensuu.
Participation requires registration by Sunday 31 May. The final program and Teams links will be sent to participants after the registration has closed.
The seminar is organised in collaboration with Borders, Mobilities and Cultural encounters (BOMOCULT) research community and the Department of Social Sciences.
Potential inquiries: [email protected] and [email protected]
Tentative program
(to be finalised when we know the exact number of participants and presentations)
Thursday
12.00–12.15 Welcoming words (MSSc. Meri-Tuuli Hirvonen & Professor Tiina Sotkasiira)
12.15–13.45 Keynote and a video art work: Exploring crip spacetime via video art and autoethnograpy. Rhythms, repetitiveness and enduring yet constantly transforming reality of chronic illness (Anna Leppo, Salome Tuomaala-Özdemir & Iida Putkuri, Realm of the Sick -project)
13.45–14.15 Coffee break
14.15–16.00 Paper sessions I & II
17.30–19.00 Researchers’ informal get together (the place will be reserved once we know the number of participants)
Friday (held in Finnish)
8.30–10.00 Työryhmät III & IV
10.00-10.30 Tutkijoiden aamukahvit (mahdollisuus lepoon)
10.30–12.00 Haavoittuvuus tutkijan omassa ruumiissa (Kirsi Törmi)
12.00–13.00 Lounas (omakustanteinen)
13.00–13.45 Kehollista ja kertomuksellista reflektointia päivän annista
13.45–14.30 Palautekeskustelu ja seuraavat askeleet
Keynotes
Exploring crip spacetime via video art and autoethnograpy. Rhythms, repetitiveness and enduring yet constantly transforming reality of chronic illness (Anna Leppo, Salome Tuomaala-Özdemir & Iida Putkuri, Realm of the Sick -project)
People living with somatic, chronic illness experience a material-discursive reality that is not shared by healthy people, even those who share everyday life with them. Margaret Price (2024) refers to this distinct reality as “crip spacetime”. It is not fixed, a place or a stable experience, but always in a state of becoming. It is thus obscure, not perceptible to those not experiencing it. This gap of understanding is extremely difficult to close.
In our presentation we will explore how chronically ill people’s embodied knowledge of their reality could be expressed in ways that are legible also to healthy people. Attempts to express crip spacetime tend to be interpreted as “chaos narratives” (Frank 2013), which are typically perceived as threatening in their unexplainability. We will explore how academic research could benefit from the means of art and artistic research when trying to reach towards understanding experiences of chronic illness and crip spacetime.
In our research project, The Realm of the Sick (Koneen säätiö, 2024-27), two researchers with non-fatal but incurable somatic illnesses collaborate with two artists. Based on autoethnographic diaries kept by the researchers for over two years, the artists created a video artwork titled “Part 1: Time”. The artwork explores different temporalities of living with somatic chronic illness; repetitive cycles of managing symptoms, going through a variety of treatments, reaching out for care, and the bodily experiences of fatigue and pain – but also rare moments of pleasure.
As a part of our presentation, we will show the artwork to illustrate how video art can be an illuminating method to portray the slow rhythms, tiresome repetitiveness and forever enduring yet constantly transforming reality of being chronically ill. The artwork can be understood as an experiment of what Sara Wasson (2018) calls “episodic reading”, an attempt to make space for experiences often left unacknowledged due to their incoherence that resists conventional narrative form.
Ruumiin runot – haavoittuvuus tutkijan omassa ruumiissa (Kirsi Törmi)
On ristiriitaista ja kiehtovaa, kuinka vaikkapa ’hyvää elämää’ tutkivan tutkijan oma ruumis ajautuu turhan usein jaksamisen reunamille ja sen yli. Miten voisimme tunnistaa ja tunnustaa inhimillisen kestävyyden rajat ja pystyisimme tekemään tutkimusta tavalla, joka suojelee lähintä mahdollista luontokappaletta, lähiluontoa, eli omaa ja kanssatutkijan ruumista? Mikäli tutkimuksen nimissä teho viljelemme ruumistamme ja ohitamme sen hienovaraiset heijasteet, somaattinen kommunikaatio voi tihentyä: ruumis voi alkaa runoilla monin eri tavoin. Usein nuo fyysis-psyykkiset oireet ovat juurtuneet kokemuksiin, jotka olemme ohittaneet. Kuten runojen äärellä viipyily ylipäätään, myös ruumiin runot tarvitsevat tilaa, aikaa, viipyilyä. Kuuntelemisen polku avautuu kehotietoisuuden kautta. Kannamme mukanamme tiedostamattomia, ääneen lausumattomia arvoja ja etiikkaa, jotka muovaavat toimintaamme ja valintojamme, usein huomaamatta. Millä tavoin nämä ruumiiseen kietoutuneet arvojen kerrostumat meitä ohjaavat ja missä kohdin ne myös pakottavat? Alustuksessa ja pienimuotoisissa kehollisissa harjoitteissa pääsemme kuulostelemaan edellä mainittua.
Keynote speakers
Anna Leppo is a sociologist and a Lecturer in Social and Public Policy at the University of Helsinki. Her research has focused on the experiences of people in a range of vulnerable situations, such as living with illness or addiction. Currently, she studies chronic somatic illness from the perspectives of embodied experience, materiality and temporality, social and health care services and the possibilities for agency and participation. Leppo is the PI of the research and art project Realm of the Sick – Exploring the Agency and Participation of People Living with Chronic Illness (Kone Foundation 2024-2027).
Iida Putkuri works as a project planner in the project Realm of the Sick – Exploring the Agency and Participation of People Living with Chronic Illness. She has a Master’s degree on sociology and in her career she has been especially focused on the questions of accessibility and equality.
Salome Tuomaala-Özdemir is a researcher in the Realm of the Sick project at the University of Helsinki. Her doctoral research in Comparative Religion examined ethical agency in women’s abortion narratives, and since then she has explored intersections of embodiment, narrative and society. Her work spans neighbourhood relations, political imagination and social reproduction of everyday utopias, drawing on experience as both a researcher and a community developer. She has written an autoethnographic diary on living with multiple chronic illnesses and, together with Elina Niinivaara, has co-developed research on embodied knowledge of chronically ill people since 2022.
Kirsi Törmi on tanssitaiteen tohtori, joka on toiminut tanssitaiteen parissa laaja-alaisesti tanssijana, koreografina ja tutkijana. Sosiaalinen eetos, taiteen avulla syvenevä itseymmärrys ja myötätunto sekä monitieteinen lähestymistapa ovat lukeutuneet hänen tutkimuksellisiin intresseihinsä. Törmi on myös sosionomi (kriisityö) ja psykoanalyyttinen psykoterapeutti. Tällä hetkellä Kirsi työskentelee psykoterapeuttina omalla vastaanotollaan ja hän erikoistuu kouluttajapsykoterapeutiksi Nuorisopsykoterapiasäätiön ja Helsingin yliopiston yhteistyössä toteuttamissa opinnoissa. Kirsi toimii myös kouluttajana (TRE®, työhyvinvointi) ja työnohjaajana.