TY - JOUR
T1 - Writing touch, writing (epistemic) vulnerability
AU - Kaasila-Pakanen, Anna-Liisa
AU - Jääskeläinen, Pauliina
AU - Gao, Grace
AU - Mandalaki, Emmanouela
AU - Zhang, Ling Eleanor
AU - Einola, Katja
AU - Johansson, Janet
AU - Pullen, Alison
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 The Authors. Gender, Work & Organization published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - Touch mediates relations between self-other, writers, and readers; it is material and affective. This paper is the outcome of writing touch as a collaborative activity between eight women writers across different times and locals. In sharing experiences of touch during and beyond the pandemic, we engage with collaborative writing articulated here as colligere, involving the assembling of writing in a holding space. The meanings and feelings of touch arise from our distinct writer positionalities as we think, work, and write in and about life, research, organizations, and organizing. We suggest that writing that reflects on/through touch presents epistemic vulnerability and openness to unknowing in the nexus of intercorporeal relationships. Writing touch contributes to writing and doing academia differently, particularly by offering sensorial encounters that reframe the ethico-political conditions of academic knowledge creation.
AB - Touch mediates relations between self-other, writers, and readers; it is material and affective. This paper is the outcome of writing touch as a collaborative activity between eight women writers across different times and locals. In sharing experiences of touch during and beyond the pandemic, we engage with collaborative writing articulated here as colligere, involving the assembling of writing in a holding space. The meanings and feelings of touch arise from our distinct writer positionalities as we think, work, and write in and about life, research, organizations, and organizing. We suggest that writing that reflects on/through touch presents epistemic vulnerability and openness to unknowing in the nexus of intercorporeal relationships. Writing touch contributes to writing and doing academia differently, particularly by offering sensorial encounters that reframe the ethico-political conditions of academic knowledge creation.
KW - collaborative writing
KW - ethico-politics
KW - knowledge
KW - relational reflexivity
KW - touch
KW - vulnerability
KW - writing differently
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U2 - 10.1111/gwao.13064
DO - 10.1111/gwao.13064
M3 - Article
SN - 1468-0432
VL - 31
SP - 264
EP - 283
JO - Gender, Work & Organization
JF - Gender, Work & Organization
IS - 1
ER -