Abstract
This article reimagines classroom texts as unpredictable ‘willful objects’ that transmit ‘sticky’ intensities. The author argues that such intensities permeate classroom spaces and affectively position students in ways that inflict trauma, defined here as an insidious, daily injury that fosters and reinforces a narrow view of race, gender and/or sexuality. Honing in on these more-than-human encounters opens up possibilities to explore how the classroom, as an active body, provides testimony to the historical traumas that live on in the present – on the skin of students and teachers who are obligated to live with and/or bear witness to such injuries. Educators are invited to consider how a kind of healing can occur through a pedagogy of exposure, which seeks to not only expose but also recover traumatic wounds by embracing an affective, albeit risky, relationship to past and present histories of violence.
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