About ddhutto

Born and schooled in New York, I finished my BA in Literature and Philosophy as a study abroad student in St Andrews, Scotland, where my maternal roots lie. I returned to New York to teach fourth grade in the Bronx for a year in order to fund my MPhil in Logic and Metaphysics. I completed my DPhil in Philosophy in York, England and then took up an academic post in Hertfordshire, living with my wife and three boys there for over 20 years. Since joining the University of Wollongong in 2013, Australia is our new home.

International Conference on Narrative – Online: May 19-23, 2021

The International Conference on Narrative is an interdisciplinary forum addressing all dimensions of narrative theory and practice. The conference is held in collaboration with the International Society for the Study of Narrative

This conference will bring together about 350 speakers to address issues of narrative from a variety of positions and perspectives

S/Prof Hutto joins editorial board of Narratives and Mental Health in 2020

S/Prof Hutto has joined the editorial board of the forthcoming Series: Narratives and Mental Health.

He will support the series editors: Jarmila Mildorf, University of Paderborn, Germany, Elisabeth Punzi, University of Gothenburg, Sweden, Christoph Singer, University of Vienna, Austria, and Cornelia Wächter, University of Bochum, Germany

 

 

 

 

 

 

Narratives and Mental Health offers a forum for dialogue between the arts, humanities and other disciplines interested in mental health and well-being.

Narrative is a central tool for meaning-making. Yet, its relevance has long been side-lined in the mental health sector including psychiatry, clinical psychology, medicine and social work.

To explore the intersection of narratives and mental health, the peer-reviewed book series takes an interdisciplinary approach and accommodates studies which investigate, for one, the uses and usefulness, but also the possible limitations of narrative in mental health care settings. The series is also very interested in studies that examine mental health issues in the representation, conceptualization, medialization and dissemination of mental health-narratives in areas as varied as literature and life-writing, the arts and film, journalism and (oral) history, digital and graphic storytelling, and many more.

Monographs and themed volumes are invited that include perspectives from comparative literary studies, history, narratology, psychology and philosophy, amongst others.

Authors are cordially invited to submit proposals and/or full manuscripts to the publisher at BRILL, Masja Horn.