Spotlight On: Stockton Faculty Collaboration Examines the Body Through Many Narratives
Galloway, N.J. ā&²Ō²ś²õ±č;Christina Jackson (pictured), assistant professor of Sociology at Āé¶¹“«Ć½, recently co-authored āEmbodied Difference: Divergent Bodies in Public Discourseā with Jamie Thomas of Swarthmore College. The volume was published by Lexington Inc. in March and examines marginalization and normalization with a focus on the body across public arenas.
Jacksonās personal chapter discusses her ethnographic urban environmental work in
San Francisco. She studied how the Black, brown and poor residents of a particular environmentally toxic
neighborhood slated for redevelopment and gentrification were viewed as deviant in
their protest to protect their neighborhood.
āMy chapter adds a very understudied site of marginalization: urban redevelopment
meetings in neighborhoods. In these seemingly āpublicā meetings, bodies are policed
and silenced when they do not follow guidelines for ānormativeā behavior,ā said Jackson
of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. āMarginalized residents use their bodies to redirect
the course of the conversation back to quality of life issues and their concerns.
In turn, not following the rules causes them to be more isolated from the decision-making process as set by neighborhood stakeholders.ā
The volume also incorporates expertise from Katrina Richter, adjunct faculty of Performing Arts at Stockton; and Emily August, assistant professor of British Literature at Stockton.
āThe body is so central to what we do in the dance department. I was thrilled when Christina asked me to contribute a chapter because we so often fail to see the inherent racism and Eurocentrism embedded in so-called āclassicalā dance forms like ballet,ā Richter said. āTaking a critical, anthropological look at the āidealā dancing body can tell us a lot about ourselves, and the ways in White supremacy influences our aesthetics and artistic preferences, especially during these difficult times for our country.ā
August said she was honored that her analysis of 19th-century surgical textbooks, such as the iconic medical textbook, āGrayās Anatomy,ā contributed to the volumeās ārich discussion.ā
āMy research focuses on the human body, and the role of medical and scientific discourse in shaping cultural perspectives on the body. Iāve always been wary of the ways in which we invest scienceāand particularly medicineāwith the cultural authority to police bodies, and the political and legal authority to ācorrectā bodies so that they comply with standardized norms that are inevitably white, male, thin, and able-bodied,ā August said. āBecause my work is situated at the intersection of literary criticism, histories of medicine, and histories of the body and embodiment, and Iām always looking for ways to collaborate across disciplinary boundaries, and this collection really demonstrates the kind of connections that are so necessary to a thriving academic culture.ā
Reported by Mandee McCullough
*Photo taken by Micah Edgehill