Mapping the becoming of the novice physiotherapist

Christine Cummins*, Kate Waterworth, Louise Søgaard Hansen

*Corresponding author

Publikation: KonferencebidragKonferenceabstrakt til konferenceForskningpeer review

Abstract

We are interested in the processes which shape the ‘becoming’ of the novice physiotherapist. Our starting point was data generated with subjects within the first five years of their professional career, working in Aotearoa New Zealand. Our analysis was guided by the approach (and ‘posthuman’ philosophy) that Braidotti takes to map the fluid in-between flows of situated and embodied subject positionings. This cartographic process acts to consider locations in space (geo-political and ecological dimensions) as well as in time (historical and genealogical). The figurations we trace are not from one subjectivity to another but of an embodied subject always in-formation. Looking to construct alternative figurations of power relations of affirmation and resistance, our analyses, although themselves in a state of becoming, showed these novice practitioners unprepared in their preparedness, confronted with paradox, uncertainty, and emotion. We noted the geo-political influences of Christian and capitalist imperatives on the becoming of the novice physiotherapist—their desire to do a ‘good job’, and an assumption that as a subject they could be an asset to be capitalised upon. We noticed the genealogical figurations of the physiotherapy professional (as mechanical, as helpful) and the clash of this with happenings in their ecologies of practice. We question how possible it is to prepare these novices for these conflicts or is this an inevitable process of becoming in the postmodern world and the profession in the time of advanced capitalism.
OriginalsprogEngelsk
Publikationsdato14 feb. 2024
StatusUdgivet - 14 feb. 2024
Begivenhed8th international In Sickness & In Health Conference: Diagnosis • destruction • voice • assemblage - Auckland, New Zealand
Varighed: 13 feb. 202415 feb. 2024
Konferencens nummer: 8

Konference

Konference8th international In Sickness & In Health Conference
Nummer8
Land/OmrådeNew Zealand
ByAuckland
Periode13/02/202415/02/2024
AndetThe themes for ISIH 2024 are diagnosis • destruction • voice • assemblage.<br/><br/>Firstly, these reflect the four main research interests of our keynote speakers. But they also represent four powerful motifs of contemporary healthcare.<br/><br/>They speak to the ways we consume healthcare and the people who use it. They shape the way healthcare technologies develop, and they drive the motives of governments, health professionals, service users, their families, and communities. And they shape the spaces taken up by healthcare in society and the networks of power at play.<br/><br/>All of these things are of interest to the In Sickness and In Health community.<br/><br/>So if your work engages with critical health questions in any of the following areas, you will find many like-minded practitioners, scholars, and students at the ISIH 2024 conference:<br/><br/>• Technologies and the body<br/>• Dominance and class, race, gender, sexuality, or other structured categories of difference<br/>• Points of resistance<br/>• Critical aspects of health professional practice<br/>• Postcolonial futures<br/>• Ethics in health care in the 21st century<br/>• Post-human conceptions of health and disease<br/>• The Global South and inequities of healthcare access<br/>• Planetary and environmental justice, health, and equity<br/>• Indigenous epistemologies<br/>• The governance of health priorities<br/>• Social justice<br/>• The arts, humanities, and health<br/>• Digital disruption and post-professional futures for healthcare<br/>• Citizenship and migration<br/>• The aesthetics of care<br/>• Discourses of healthcare<br/>• Democratisation of health care, research, and systems<br/>• Intensification of governmentality and its processes<br/>• Neoliberalism, neo-conservatism, and social injustice<br/>• Spaces and places of health production<br/>• Ideologies of risk

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