哲学杂志철학 학술지哲学のジャーナルEast Asian
Journal of
Philosophy

Catalogue > Edited Book > Contribution

Publication details

Publisher: Springer

Place: Berlin

Year: 2018

Pages: 169-174

ISBN (Hardback): 9783319595986

Full citation:

Emily J. Hood, "Hair pulling in the art classroom", in: Pedagogies in the flesh, Berlin, Springer, 2018

Abstract

In this chapter, Emily Jean Hood discusses bodies of difference. Bodies that are gendered, raced, sexual, and able/disable that emerge from a vast array of contexts. Her writing is a phenomenological analysis of an experience she had as an instructor in a junior high art class. She reflects on a memory as a rupture in the everyday quickness of classroom interaction. The extension of another body toward hers in an unexpected way, the grasping of her hair as an object of curiosity, the lines that were crossed, and the invasion of proximity called her being into awareness. Hood's hair, an object that is an extension of her being, suddenly becomes a point of difference. In this chapter, she digs further into this notion of bodies and difference in the art classroom. Using Linda Alcoff's phenomenology of racial embodiment and Sara Ahmed's notion of orientation, she discusses possible structures that facilitated hair pulling in her art classroom.

Cited authors

Publication details

Publisher: Springer

Place: Berlin

Year: 2018

Pages: 169-174

ISBN (Hardback): 9783319595986

Full citation:

Emily J. Hood, "Hair pulling in the art classroom", in: Pedagogies in the flesh, Berlin, Springer, 2018