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V.3 N.1, October 1995

Written on the Body: Autobiography, Phenomenology and the Language of Teaching

by Rishma Dunlop

Department of Language Education
University of British Columbia

    Bone of my bone. Flesh of my flesh. To remember you its my own body I touch. Thus she was, here and here. The physical memory blunders through the doors the mind has tried to seal...Wisdom says forget, the body howls. The bolts of your collarbone undo me. Thus she was, here and here.
    --Jeannette Winterson, Written on the Body

    If we ask women who teach to talk about their work in the language that dominates the discourse of schooling, we invite language that celebrates system and denies doubt, that touts objectives and denies ambivalence, that confesses frustration but withholds love.
    --Madeleine Grumet, Bittermilk
    All my writing--and yours--is autobiographical.
    --Donald M. Murray

  1. Sex. Birth. Death. I suspect that the text of the body, with its multiple discourses, is our most expressive and powerful canon as it reflects lived experience. As I acknowledge the fundamental truths that are embodied in the commonalities and differences of human experience, I am struck by the fact that our academic institutions suppress the language of the body in educational life. As Mary Catherine Bateson (1994) states:

    Of all the texts that must be read to understand the human condition, the body is the most eloquent, for we read in all its stages and transitions a pattern that connects all human communities as well as differences that divide. People in different eras and places have read it differently, or made every effort to deny access to parts of the story, to its alternate readings, or to the wider learning that flows from it so it becomes the justification for mutual suspicion and for alienation from the natural world (p.172).
  2. As an alternative to our institutional perceptions of schooling that sanctify this disembodiment from the natural world, Madeleine Grumet (1992) proposes in "Existential and Phenomenological Foundations of Autobiographical Writing" that autobiography may be a way to reconceptualize the ways in which we know the world, asserting Sartre's conviction that to name something is to change the world. In this sense, the use of language to reconceptualize curriculum becomes an act of reforming the world, a return to the body as life-text and source of knowledge.

  3. I acknowledge the constructedness of our stories. As I construct my own narratives, the moments stopped are lifted from multiple lives, enacted in the roles of woman: mother, lover, wife, daughter, sister, friend and teacher/scholar. Like Grumet, phenomenology takes me home, extending the "horizons of educational theory" to embrace the passion, politics, and labour of human reproduction" (p.63). I turn to the body, as the site of passion, of richness and significance, and of understanding, as I struggle to make sense of educational experience and teaching life. It is primal intimacy that informs my writing, threaded through my body, inextricably intertwined, tangled through the systems of public experience. I envision writing as evoked by Anaïs Nin:

    ...writing should become music and penetrate the senses directly. For this poetry is necessary...it is not the writing of emotion and the senses, which I seek. I want meaning to enter the body by some other route, not the mind.... (Nin, 1971, pp. 40-41).
  4. I return to the familiar. The conflicts of the inner self are reflected in the struggles between creation and maternal love; between realism and romanticism; between past, present and future; in the Socratic dialogues and tensions between teacher and students; between educators and colleagues, and through the attempt to find significance through the articulation and reconstruction of the writer's world. It is an attempt to voice Barthes' comparisons of "teaching to play, reading to eros, writing to seduction" (quoted in Sontag, 1982, pp. xvi-xvii).

    BODYREADING: THE SKIN OF THE EARTH

  5. I write about the text of the body, contextualizing teaching and living:

    
                Bodyreading
    
    
    
                Your hands are a gift to me.
    
                They have mapped me,
    
                explored in terrains
    
                of luminous manuscripts,
    
                honeyed narratives,
    
                pages turned in my lap.
    
                
  6. "Bodyreading." My body as story. Envisioned as book. Text of lived experience. During the history of human experience, we search for a geography of the soul, an internal landscape that will slip us into place in its contours.

  7. "Bodyreading" is my expression of Merleau-Ponty's concept of the body subject: all the elements of historical, social, political influences contained in the self are brought together into the body, a country or place where we live in felt experience. These metaphors express the acquisition of knowledge in all its multi-hued facets as pages of the book are turned, an experience of pleasure, felt through the body. Sex. Birth. Death.

    
                 Isolde
    
    
    
                 She is scripted, aloof,
    
                 composed
    
                 in a properly bridled score,
    
                 but the aria begins and
    
                 he kisses the nape
    
                 of her neck,
    
                 the hollow of her back,
    
                 the inner curves of her knees
    
                 and she is undone.
    
                 
  8. The metaphor of adultery is analogous to the seductive power of newness of experience, the acquisition of new knowledge. It is the excitement of the unfamiliar that can weaken us at the knees, stunning us with the recognition of the paradoxes of desire. This is the sensation of étonnement that Barthes seeks. Acknowledged here is the strength of eros as desire that has an astonishing power to appear to the self with urgency and force. Often, it has the fearsome power to remain beyond the reach of social order and conventional morality.

  9. In "Isolde," I explore the idea of the social roles of women, their scripted, written score, metaphorically placed notes set into place on the musical manuscript. Ultimately, the music of seduction, the promise of new knowledge of the opera, provides the "undoing" in a departure from the written life. The bolts of your collarbone undo me, here and here.

  10. The perspectives of three major French feminist writers, Irigaray, Cixous, and Kristeva, differ widely in specific theoretical approaches to the body and the notion of desire. However, their shared intellectual bonds lie in their exploration of the psychoanalytic basis in Lacan's rewriting of Freud and their interest in the work of Derrida. All three writers agree that l'écriture féminine is closely connected to the body, its rhythms and drives. In the emancipatory process that is writing, the body ceases to remain purely biological; it is written and socially constructed from an early age:

    [Kristeva and Irigaray] have shown that some concept of the body is essential to understanding social production, oppression and resistance; and that the body need not, indeed must not be considered merely a biological entity, but can be seen as a socially inscribed, historically marked, psychically and interpersonally significant product. (Gross, 1986a, p. 140)
    
                Lunar Eros
    
    
    
                Her heart
    
                jolts against
    
                the bony cage of her ribs
    
                on the long nights
    
                wet with the moon.
    
                Her locked soul
    
                is keyed in his mouth
    
                in the cadence of breath.
    
                
  11. A metaphor. The sexual, sensual body. Acquisition of knowledge. The ribcage becomes prison, imprisoning the heart... the mind. The search for the internal geography to house the soul Satisfied by the imprint of another. The speaker is released. By the lover. Or teacher. Finding the key to new knowledge. Learning is erotic. Seductive. Capturing the breath in the unlocking. Slipping into place. Here and here...

    L'ENFANT

    
                Aubade to a Newborn
    
    
    
                I hold you close,
    
                trying to inhale the pink gleam of dawn
    
                in your sweet flesh.
    
    
    
                You are tender-grasped, yet bruised
    
                by my intensity.
    
                I strain to absorb you.
    
    
    
                Where is the link
    
                of the twist of sheets,
    
                mouth-kissed skin,
    
                to this glimmer of genes?
    
                Through chasms of pain
    
                the unseeing eye has laboured
    
                to whole sight.
    
    
    
                You are sensuous, strange,
    
                cradled in the shining
    
                golden embrace of new morning.
    
                

  12. "Aubade to a Newborn." For my daughter Cara. Firstborn. I play with the traditional aubade. Morning song to a lover. Bittersweet mystery. Paradox of childbirth. Contradictions. Sex. Conception. Birth. Tenderness. Yet fierceness. Motherhood. Child of mine. Separate and strange. Yet inseparable from my flesh. A multiplicity of tensions and voices. Sex. Birth. Bittermilk, fluid of our contradictions.

  13. Echoes of Kristeva. In "Stabat Mater; The Paradox: Mother or Primary Narcissism," Kristeva's text acknowledges the experience of the mother. Kristeva reflects the continuing exploration with forms and representations of language in text, exposing new kinds of discourse and possibilities for articulation of the women's experiences. Kristeva writes her text in columns, with personal, associative writing on one side, and more traditional academic discourse on the other, creating an interplay of texts that accepts the paradoxes of the mother's felt experiences:

    ...formless, unnamable embryo. Epiphanies. Photos of what is not yet visible, and that language necessarily skims over from afar, allusively. Words that are always too distant, too abstract for this underground swarming of sec- onds, folding in unimaginable spaces. Writing them down is an ordeal of discourse, like love. What is loving for a woman, the same thing as writing. (Kristeva, 1987a, pp. 234-235)
    Bodies of Knowledge

  14. Phenomenological reflection leads me continually back to the notion of the body as ideological construction, as reflected and constrained by our schooling, our curriculums, yet, I am constantly struck by its irrevocable presence that cannot be denied in our teaching worlds. Our carefully ordered classrooms, logical plans and systems collapse with the inevitably human "eruptions of the body, intimacy into public space" (Grumet, 1988, p.70). I am reminded of Grumet's reflections on the autobiographical text of a teacher in a first grade classroom undergoing a formal observation by an evaluator. The teacher is at first pleased with herself--"The lessons were going well." Her place behind the new half-round table establishes the separateness between teacher and children. Grumet writes that the children are seen only as expectant faces "sans bodies, sans belches, sans sound, sans everything." This false vision comes to a sudden end when Paul vomits all over and his false teeth land at the teacher's feet. The space between them is closed as she cleans his shoes and she finds shelter in using the euphemism "special child." The evaluator leaves: "her exit was graceful." However, the teacher cannot remain distanced by the language of the governing paradigms of her teaching world. She cannot name Paul as "other;" they are linked, her slacks damp, reeking of sickness. In the acknowledgement of the body, of human truth, she is comfortable with teaching for the first time.

    Entry from my journal, November, 23, 1994.

    These reminders of the body surface in our recent doctoral seminar, a course in curriculum theory. We have been engaged in discussions about theory and philosophical stances in relation to curriculum--Rousseau, Tyler, Dewey, Grumet. Students were engaged in a heated debate over the notions of class and privilege and oppression. We bandied terms about as has been our intellectual habit. Suddenly, we are brought back into the realities of lived experience as one of the students interrupts the light-hearted banter with an emotional outburst. She states that in this room sits much privilege and class. She speaks about how she lives and what "her people" live with everyday. She speaks of oppression and violence. She speaks of language that obliterates meaning in its theoretical, political correctness. Racism is, afterall, racism. The pain and anger of her body fills the air of the classroom; it is palpable, touching us. We cannot avoid it and we cannot fill the silence with words and constructions of language. Where is our curriculum now, if it fails to acknowledge the reality and the depth of this woman's experience, of our experiences? Where is wisdom? The body howls. It is impossible to move or to speak. We are held in place, held inside our bodies. We are salted by the bitterness of her tears. Finally, one woman moves across the room to hold the other's hand. The only language possible, eloquent enough, is that of the flesh. Bittermilk, fluid of our contradictions. Thus she was, here and here.
    A Matter of Language: Pleasures of Text

    
                Route 97
    
                
    
                Early morning.
    
                Driving
    
                the winding twists
    
                of Highway 97,
    
                the daily journey.
    
    
    
                Echoes
    
                the voices of children,
    
                clatter of breakfast dishes,
    
                chaotic disorders
    
                of family.
    
    
    
                I sip on my coffee
    
                mind soothed
    
                by the melodic voice,
    
                the silver brain of radio.
    
                I am lulled
    
                by the blue-green
    
                of Lake Okanagan, glass-smooth,
    
                my bones infused
    
                with warmth through
    
                the sun-glossed
    
                curve
    
                of windshield
    
    
    
                I prepare my lecture,
    
                conversing
    
                with imaginary students,
    
                expounding
    
                on the virtues
    
                of post-structural critical
    
                approaches
    
                in the close reading
    
                of poetry.
    
                Foot on the accelerator,
    
                my route is embraceable,
    
                knowable.
    
    
    
                Reaching campus,
    
                the air chills
    
                as gold sky
    
                fades
    
                into gray
    
                concrete hallways, classrooms and offices.
    
                Stuffed under my office door,
    
                notes, crumpled missives,
    
                inarticulate scribblings,
    
                multiple excuses
    
                for late term papers.
    
    
    
                My body is estranged
    
                from my tailored flesh;
    
                the skin freezes,
    
                icy bumps rising on the surface.
    
                As I enter the classroom, I am crisp,
    
                my voice staccato
    
                against the walls.
    
    
    
                I focus on my students,
    
                listening to the rustling and shuffling
    
                of papers.
    
                The Basketball Boys sprawl,
    
                endless limbs spilling out
    
                of their desks,
    
                their giant sneakers
    
                constantly fidgeting.
    
    
    
                There is an audible groan
    
                when I mention poetry.
    
                The woman in the second row says
    
                "I can't do poetry."
    
    
    
                I take a long drag
    
                of my coffee,
    
                feel it flow warm,
    
                deep into my throat,
    
                filling the hollows of my body.
    
                And I begin.
    
    
    
                Teaching, I am calm,
    
                my voice soothed into lyric hum
    
                as I speak of the slants of language,
    
                passion, sorrow, love,
    
                moments keenly remembered
    
                and recorded.
    
                I search for the breathing tissue,
    
                embedding hooks into
    
                their flesh.
    
    
    
                I rivet them with my eyes,
    
                wrap them in my voice,
    
                imagine them in
    
                violet evenings,
    
                smoky dusks filled with
    
                twilight scents of green,
    
                ripe foliage,
    
                poets' voices floating
    
                a slow music of sorcery,
    
                flutes and lyres at the gates,
    
                echoing through the groves
    
                of olive trees
    
                and almond blossoms.
    
    
    
                I will them
    
                to peel back their skins,
    
                with fingers streaming light
    
                into the river
    
                of rhythms and meters
    
                of transcribed heartbeats.
    
                Pour yourselves skinless,
    
                liquid through the glass of language
    
                into the irises of eyes.
    
    
    
                My body thaws
    
                and in its heat
    
                the Basketball Boys are still,
    
                their restless noises hushed
    
                in the infinite pleats of skin.
    
                And we begin,
    
                my students and I,
    
                the route of mystery,
    
                unfolding in the
    
                cadence of breath,
    
                iridescent poems
    
                housed beneath the flesh.
    
                

  15. I move from the place of the familiar, the family, to the oppression of the institution and the notion of curriculum as something to be delivered in the classroom, back to a reclamation of the body in the desire to encourage students to find the poetic, the aesthetically beautiful in their own worlds of experience, under their own human skins and in their hearts. A reclamation of teaching. Recovery of the world through poetic text.

  16. Ultimately, like Grumet, I consider what teaching means to women. Grumet (1988) discusses the essential bonds of women, first to their own mothers, then to their children and to other womens' children, underscoring the contradictions inherent between our experiences of childhood, mothering and the curriculum we offer as teachers:

    Convinced that we are too emotional, too sensitive, and that our work as mothers or housewives is valued only by our immediate families, we hide it, and like Eve, forbidden to know and teach what she has directly experienced, we keep that knowledge to ourselves as we dispense the curriculum to the children of other women (p.28).
  17. Grumet claims that we must interpret our reproductive experience (procreation and nurturance) and our productive experience (curriculum and teaching) each through the other's terms, not by negating the differences between them but by naming and accepting their contradictions. By this means we can reconceive our commitment to education (p.29). In searching to find the words and language to express my experiences as a woman, I realize that in the classroom and in the home, I encounter others in ways that move back and forth in the multiple tensions inherent to life: between public and private self, familial life, sensual and sexual life, and between social, political and pedagogic discourses. As I write, I know that what enriches my exploration of self is the conscious seeking out of language that is deeply centred in the sensual and the familial self. Primal intimacy seems inherent to the woman's voice and it informs my dialogues with others, colouring my teaching world. This voice, for me, does not encourage or imply sentimentality; rather, it is grounded in rigorous scholarship, the quest for increased understanding of the constant dialectic between public and private experience.

  18. Much of the criticism of the French feminist poststructuralists has been aimed at the charges that the "focus on language as the foundation of woman's oppression...is not sufficiently grounded in material reality" and the claim that l'écriture féminine is essentialist. However, as Rebecca Martusewicz asserts, this criticism fails to acknowledge the neglect of the material reality of discursive systems and disregards the consideration of women's bodies as a "source of metaphor for multiplicity and difference"(1992, p. 145). Martusewicz concludes her essay with a question that has been explored in my research through autobiography and the reconstruction of self: What does it mean to be an educated woman?

    [T]o live as feminist educators is to live a tension between a critical theoretical space and an affirmative political space. It is within this in-between, this 'elsewhere,' that we must seek the educated woman. (Martusewicz, 1992, p. 155)
  19. My paradoxes are plentiful. I bring this constantly changing self to the classroom. My students bring their selves. My colleagues bring other selves to their classrooms. Their paradoxes are plentiful. We must all situate ourselves in relation to our realities and our texts, our world/words, attempting to find a country or an imaginary homeland of common dialogue.

  20. My narratives are also texts that move through autobiography towards literacy that acknowledges the pleasures of texts and of human experience. John Willinsky, in his book The Triumph of Literature/The Fate of Literacy, eloquently calls for a movement in our energies as teachers to explore how literacy (as intimately connected with literature) reaches out to the world, rather than regarding the notion of literacy simply as a testable cognitive skill to be practised. Rather, Willinsky defines this new literacy as one that approaches literary work as inherently contained within language," a representation intent on re-constituting some part of the world in its own images, and a source of pleasure in, and power over, the world." The word "pleasure" is a refreshing one. It is conspicuously absent from most post-secondary course outlines. Willinsky states:

    This approach to literacy and literature calls for teaching students not only the specific skills of reading and writing but instructing them, as well, about how the social context of literacy operates, about how it continues to write a good part of the world we live in. We exist in a sea of texts that inform and govern our lives... The social formation of our world/word is a matter of who writes and who is written, what counts as graffiti and what as a paid political message, whose voices are heard and how the scripts of a postliterate workplace and media are fashioned. The fate of literacy is still our future, our text, our life (1991, p.4).
  21. Despite the sense of different realities which may exist in texts, as a teacher, it remains my conviction that it is an identification with and a recognition of self in the story of the "other" that makes a student's experience with literature one that touches, grips, resonates, holds tight to the sensory consciousness, urging a return, a re-reading, offering a multiplicity of ways of seeing and knowing and feeling through language. Despite the differences in texts, in realities, and in the multitude of "imaginary homelands," our universal must still be within the realm of the human body, its rhythms and its capacity for feeling. Sex, birth, death. Herein lies the commonality of human experience that informs us, educates, shapes us. This is the dialogue of teaching life, one that promises us a curriculum of compassion.

  22. This quest for scholarship that embraces the heart in an understanding of the world and selves is eloquently expressed by Christ:

    ...at the root of our scholarship is eros, a passion to connect, the desire to deepen our understanding of ourselves and our world, the passion to transform or preserve the world as we understand it deeply. At its best, scholarship becomes a way of loving ourselves, others, and our world more deeply.
    (1987, p. 58)
  23. I seek language to express lived and felt experience, trying to come close to Anaïs Nin's idea of writing that enters not through the mind but the senses. The words of this language are tasted, lingering on the tongue, touched by flesh and bone, echoed resounding and whispered, scented, language of the body. Nin writes: "We write to heighten our awareness of life... We write to taste life twice, in the moment and in the retrospection (1966, p.13). This to me is fundamental to human experience, recovering the "unsaid" shining through the "said" that Ted Aoki speaks of, the shining through of felt experience (1992, p.27). In the effort to find the language, through phenomenological and autobiographical approaches in teaching, as well as through diverse forms of discourse, we may be able to come closer to the worlds of our teaching classrooms in meaningful ways. We may relate to students by seeking to find a dialogue that reclaims the body, that inspires, reaches into the heart and the senses to form connections in our minds and our written words. And we are undone, here and here.

References

  • Aoki, T. (1992). Voices of teaching: The uncannily correct and the elusively true. In W. Pinar & W. Reynolds (Eds), Contemporary curriculum discourses (pp.17- 27). New York: Teacher's College Press.

  • Barthes, R. (1982). A Barthes reader. S. Sontag (Ed.). London: Jonathan Cape.

  • Bateson, M.C. (1994). Peripheral visions: learning along the way. New York: Harpercollins.

  • Bridwell-Bowles, L. (1992). Discourse and diversity: Experimental writing within the academy. In College Composition and Communication, 43 (3). 349-368.

  • Christ, C. (1987). Toward a paradigm shift in the academy and in religious studies. In C. Farnham (Ed.), The impact of feminist research in the academy (pp. 53-76). Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press.

  • Cixous, H. (1981). The laugh of the Medusa. In E. Marks & I. de Courtivron (Eds.), New French feminisms (pp. 245-264). New York: Schocken Books.

  • Cixous, H. (1986). Sorties. In H. Cixous & C. Clement, The newly born woman (pp. 63-132). Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press.

  • Cixous, H., & Clement, C. (1986). The newly born woman. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press.

  • Cixous, H., & Conley V. (1984). voice i .... Boundary 2, 12, 51- 67.

  • Dunlop, R. (1995). Aubade to a newborn. Room of one's own, 18 (1) 73.

  • Dunlop, R. (1994). Bodyreading. Literator, Journal of literary criticism, comparative linguistics and literary studies, 15 (3) 189.

  • Dunlop, R. (1994). Tango through the dark. Unpublished Masters thesis, University of British Columbia.

  • Duplessis, R. (1985). For the Etruscans. In E. Showalter (Ed.), The new feminist criticism: Essays on women, literature, and theory (pp. 271-291). New York: Pantheon Books.

  • Eagleton, M, (Ed.) (1986). Feminist literary theory: A reader. Oxford: Blackwell Publishers.

  • Evans O. (1968). Anaïs Nin. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press.

  • Gross, E. (1986a). Philosophy, subjectivity and the body: Kristeva and Irigaray. In C. Pateman & E. Gross (Eds.), Feminist challenges: Social and political theory (pp. 125-143). Boston: Allen & Unwin.

  • Grumet, M. (1988). Bittermilk. University of Massachussetts Press.

  • Grumet, M. (1992). Existential and phenomenological foundations of autobiographical methods. In W. Pinar and W. Reynolds (Eds.). Understanding curriculum as phenomenological and deconstructed text ( pp. 28-43). New York: Teachers College Press.

  • Irigaray, L. (1981a). This sex which is not one. In E. Marks & I. de Courtivron (Eds.), New french feminisms (pp. 99-106). New York: Schocken Books.

  • Jones, A. R. (1985a). Inscribing femininity: French theories of the feminine. In G. Greene and C. Kahn (Eds.), Making a difference: Feminist literary criticism (pp. 80- 112). New York: Methuen.

  • Jones, A. R. (1985b). Writing the body: Toward an understanding of l'écriture féminine. In E. Showalter (Ed.), The new feminist criticism (pp. 361-377). New York: Pantheon Books.

  • Kristeva, J. (1981). Woman can never be defined. In E. Marks & I. de Courtivron (Eds.), New French feminisms (pp. 137-141). New York: Shocken Books.

  • Kristeva, J. (1987a) Tales of love (D. S. Roudiez, Trans.). New York: Columbia University Press.

  • Kristeva, J. (1987b). Talking about polylogue. In T. Moi (Ed.), French feminist thought (pp. 110-117). New York: Basil Blackwell.

  • Martusewicz, R. (1992). Mapping the terrain of the post- modern subject: Post structuralism and the educated woman. In W. Pinar (Ed.), Understanding curriculum as phenomenological and deconstructed text (pp. 131-156). New York: Teachers College Press.

  • Merleau-Ponty, M. (1962). Phenomenology of perception. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul.

  • Nin, A. (1971). The diary of Anaïs Nin 1944-1947. Gunther Stuhlmann (Ed). New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich.

  • Pinar, W. (1988b). Contemporary curriculum discourses. Scottsdale, AZ.: Gorsuch, Scarisbrick.

  • Ulmer, G. (1985). Textshop for post(e)pedagogy. In G. Atkins & M. Johnson (Eds.), Writing and reading differently: Deconstruction and the teaching of composition and literature. Lawrence, KS: University Press of Kansas.

  • Willinsky, J. (1991). The triumph of literature/The fate of literacy. New York: Teachers College Press.

  • Winterson, J. (1994). Written on the body. New York: Vintage Books.
___________________________________
Posted October 1995
   
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