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Fabricating future bodies: making digital sexualities research matter

Kate Marston (Cardiff University, Cardiff, UK)

Qualitative Research Journal

ISSN: 1443-9883

Article publication date: 6 August 2021

Issue publication date: 7 February 2022

98

Abstract

Purpose

This paper critically examines the development and direction of the Fabricating Future Bodies (FFB) Workshop. Troubling notions of co-production as enacting equality or empowering participants, it draws on feminist posthuman and new materialist concepts to understand it as an eventful process that occurs in unpredictable and shifting affect-laden assemblages.

Design/methodology/approach

The FFB Workshop formed part of the final phase of my Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) funded doctoral study, titled “Exploring young people's digital sexual cultures through creative, visual and arts-based methods”. With additional support from Wales' Doctoral Training Partnership, the workshop provided sixteen young people (aged 11–13 years) from one fieldwork school with the opportunity to work with two professional artists in order to creatively re-animate research findings on the digitally networked body. In a three-hour workshop, participants produced cut-up texts and life-size body fabrics that re-imagined what bodies might do, be and become in the future.

Findings

This paper finds that co-productive practices cannot flatten out the institutional and societal power dynamics operating within schools, highlighting how adult intervention was necessary to hold space for young people to participate. It also observes the agency of the art materials employed in the workshop in enabling young people to articulate what mattered to them about the digitally networked body. While the workshop was limited in its ability to renegotiate institutional and peer power dynamics, it produced rich data that indicated how carefully choreographed arts-based practices offer generative possibilities for digital sexualities research and education.

Originality/value

By employing speculative fiction, cut-up poetry and textiles to explore the digitally networked body, this paper outlines an innovative methodological-pedagogical approach to engaging with young people's digitally networked lives.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The author would like to thank the Wales Doctoral Training Partnership for funding the Fabricating Future Bodies Workshop, as well as the artists Bryony Gillard and Ailsa Fineron for co-developing and co-facilitating the workshop. The author would also like to thank the young people who participated in the workshop for their creative contributions. Finally, the author thanks the reviewers and editors of this special issue for their insightful commentary and support with shaping this paper.

Funding: This work was supported by the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) under DTC grant number E/J500197/1.

Citation

Marston, K. (2022), "Fabricating future bodies: making digital sexualities research matter", Qualitative Research Journal, Vol. 22 No. 1, pp. 67-80. https://doi.org/10.1108/QRJ-01-2021-0014

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2021, Emerald Publishing Limited

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