Body and Management Pedagogy

Author: Amanda Sinclair

Source: Gender, Work and Organization, Volume 12, Number 1, January 2005 , pp. 89-104(16)

Publisher: Wiley-Blackwell

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Abstract:

In this article I explore the impact of bodies in management education — why they have been ignored and what possibilities may be created when we understand them better. Bodies — including gestures, stature, posture and voice — shape and constrain how teachers and students act, what they think and what is taken away. The bodies of male and female teachers and students occupy different spaces and carry contrasting significations, resulting in different repertoires of embodied and disembodied pedagogical styles. Drawing on feminist scholarship, organizational research and my own bodily experiences and observations in management teaching, and despite the myth of disembodiment in rational classrooms, I suggest management pedagogy increasingly assumes and celebrates particular bodily performances. Rather than lament the constriction of stereotypical body regimes, I argue that making bodies more visible in management pedagogy has liberating possibilities for teachers and students and their learning.

Keywords: bodies; management; pedagogies; management education

Document Type: Research article

DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-0432.2005.00264.x

Publication date: 2005-01-01

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