Abstract
This essay asks what role a teacher-scholar-practitioner of life writing can play when she is enmeshed within a highly volatile, violent conflict along with her students who occupy multiple subject positions within the conflict. I suggest that such conditions put the scholar in a unique position first, to offer testimony to her fellow scholars. Such testimony can best take the form of a highly particularised and affectively-attentive narration of the conflict that refuses the binary of victim and oppressor that characterises much abstract theorising endemic to academic environments. Second, the teacher-scholar-practitioner of life writing may also find herself in a position uniquely suited to assist her students to find emotional comfort, meaningful knowledge of the world in which they live, and a reservoir of genuine hope within their trauma, when she turns them back upon their experiences of shared life writing and reading in the university.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 641-657 |
Number of pages | 17 |
Journal | Life Writing |
Volume | 21 |
Issue number | 4 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - 2024 |
Keywords
- War and life writing
- binary thinking
- pedagogy and life writing
- trauma and life writing
All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes
- Literature and Literary Theory