“But you look so well!”: (Un)professionalizing chronic pain through academic dress

Works Cited

Archer, L. (2008). Younger academics’ constructions of “authenticity,” “success” and professional identity. Studies in Higher Education, 33(4), 385-403.

Barthes, R. (1967). The fashion system. (M. Ward & R. Howard, Trans.). Hill and Wang.

Brown, S. (2017). PhD Barbie gets a makeover! Aesthetic labour in academia. In A., Elias, R. Gill, & C. Scharff (Eds.), Aesthetic labour: Rethinking beauty politics in neoliberalism (pp. 149-164). Palgrave Macmillan.

Carter, M. (2012). Stuff and nonsense: The limits of the linguistic model of clothing. Fashion Theory, 16(3), 343-353.

Charmaz, K. (2002). The self as habit: The reconstruction of self in chronic illness. The Occupational Therapy Journal of Research, 22(1), 31-41.

Commane, G. (2009). Bad girls and dirty bodies: Performative histories and transformative styles. In B. Scherer (Ed.), Queering paradigms (pp. 49-64). Peter Lang.

Crawford, L. (2009). Re-fashioning the architectonics of gender. English Studies in Canada, 35(2-3), 18-23.

Devereaux, C. & O’Driscoll, M. (2009). Introduction: Academic fashion. English Studies in Canada, 35(2-3), 1-4.

Dolmage, J. (2014). Disability rhetoric. Syracuse University Press.

Donaghue, N. (2017). Seriously stylish: Academic femininities and the politics of feminism and fashion in academia. In A. Elias, R. Gill, & C. Scharff (Eds.), Aesthetic labour: Rethinking beauty politics in neoliberalism (pp. 231-246). Palgrave Macmillan.

Roach-Higgins, M. & Eicher, J. (1992). Dress and identity. Clothing and Textiles Research Journal, 10(4), 1-8.

Entwistle, J. (2000). Fashion and the fleshy body: Dress as embodied practice. Fashion Theory, 4(3), 323-348.

Featherstone, M. (2010). Body, image, and affect in consumer culture. Body & Society, 16(1), 193-221.

Foucault, M. (1995). Discipline and punish. (A. Sheridan, Trans.). Pantheon Books. (Original work published 1975)

Foucault, M. (1993). About the beginning of the hermeneutics of the self: Two lectures at Dartmouth. Political Theory, 21(2), 198-227.

Gill, R. & Scharff, C. (2011). New femininities: Postfeminism, neoliberalism, and subjectivity. Palgrave Macmillan.

Halttunen, K. (1995). Humanitarianism and the pornography of pain in Anglo-American culture. The American Historical Review, 100(2), 303-334.

Hebdige, D. (1979). Subculture: The meaning of style. Routledge.

Marsden, G. (1993). The soul of the American university: From Protestant establishment to established nonbelief. Oxford University Press.

Merleau-Ponty, M. (2012). Phenomenology of perception. (D. Landes, Trans.). Routledge. (Original work published 1945)

Morris, D. (1998). Illness and culture in the postmodern age. University of California Press.

Nixon, N. (2009). Smarty pants. English Studies in Canada, 35(2-3), 24-27.

Pitts, V. (2003). In the flesh: The cultural politics of body modification. Palgrave Macmillan.

Pyysiäinen, J., Halpin, D., & Guilfoyle, A. (2017). Neoliberal governance and “responsibilization” of agents: Reassessing the mechanisms of responsibility-shift in neoliberal discursive environments. Distinktion: Journal of Social Theory, 18(2), 215-235.

Scarry, E. (1985). The body in pain: The making and unmaking of the world. Oxford University Press.

Siebers, T. (2004). Disability as masquerade. Literature and Medicine, 23(1), 1-22.

Toffoletti, K., Francombe-Webb, J., & Thorpe, H. (2018). Femininities, sport and physical culture in postfeminist, neoliberal times. In K. Toffoletti, J. Francombe-Webb, & H. Thorpe (Eds.), Femininities, sport and physical culture in postfeminist, neoliberal times (pp. 1-19). Palgrave Macmillan.

Wolfe, F. (2009). Fibromyalgia wars. The Journal of Rheumatology, 36(4), 671-678.