Article published In: Narrative Inquiry
Vol. 21:2 (2011) ► pp.238–257
Attending to the disembodied character in research on professional narratives
How the performance analysis of physically disabled professionals’ personal stories provides insight into the role of the body in narratives of professional identity
Published online: 5 January 2012
https://doi.org/10.1075/ni.21.2.04sco
https://doi.org/10.1075/ni.21.2.04sco
This essay provides a rationale of how Performance Analysis and Narrative Positioning within research on Physically Disabled Professionals’ Personal Narratives can provide insight into the role of the body in the analysis of professional narratives. Through analyzing the participants’ open-ended narratives as performances in which the narrators draw upon performativities to reconcile the absurdity associated with their deemed ‘unprofessional’ bodies legitimately occupying a professional space, the author traces the emergence of embodied professional heroes in four variations: the Super Hero, Warrior Hero, Tragic Hero, and Rogue Hero, each which illuminates the importance of the body in the construction of personal narratives of professionalism. In conclusion, the author calls for attention to the potential performance of the Anti Hero across personal narratives that emerge in unmarked bodies in order to attend the underlying performativities and discourses of power within all narratives of professionalism.
Cited by (8)
Cited by eight other publications
Pugh, Heather K. & Kendra S. Heatwole Shank
Russell, Laura D.
Sanders, Catherine E. & Alexa J. Lamm
Webster-Wright, Ann
Adler, Jonathan M.
Kerber, Anne & Maggie Murphy
Scott, Julie-Ann
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