(Dis)Embodied Disclosure in Higher Education: A Co-Constructed Narrative

Katie Aubrecht
, Nancy La Monica

Abstract

In this paper we use co-constructed autoethnographic methods to explore the tensions that animate the meaning of “disclosure” in university and college environments. Drawing insight from our embodied experiences as graduate students and university/college course instructors, our collaborative counter-narratives examine the ordinary ways that disclosure is made meaningful and material as a relationship and a form of embodied labour. Our dialogue illustrates the layered nature of disclosure—for example, self-disclosing as a disabled student in order to access academic spaces but not self-disclosing to teach as an instructor. Katie uses phenomenological disability studies to analyze disclosure at the intersection of disability and pregnancy as body-mediated moments (Draper, 2002). Nancy uses Hochschild’s (1983) notion of “emotional labour” to explore how socio-spatial processes of disclosure can be an embodied form of “extra work” (e.g., managing perceptions of stigmatized identities).

 

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Published

2017-12-20



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Articles



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How to Cite

Aubrecht, K., & La Monica, N. (2017). (Dis)Embodied Disclosure in Higher Education: A Co-Constructed Narrative. Canadian Journal of Higher Education, 47(3), 1–15. https://doi.org/10.47678/cjhe.v47i3.187780