Frozen Bodies

This essay presents a visual journal that I created for a field season on Thwaites Glacier, Antarctica, as a way both to record states of dissociation/depersonalization and track my gender identity. Drawing on autoethnography as a method of inquiry, I created a pocket-sized journal of body outlines...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of Autoethnography
Main Author: Case, Elizabeth
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: University of California Press 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/joae.2024.5.2.241
https://online.ucpress.edu/joae/article-pdf/5/2/241/813681/joae.2024.5.2.241.pdf
Description
Summary:This essay presents a visual journal that I created for a field season on Thwaites Glacier, Antarctica, as a way both to record states of dissociation/depersonalization and track my gender identity. Drawing on autoethnography as a method of inquiry, I created a pocket-sized journal of body outlines and used oil pastels to document my embodied and emotional responses to conducting fieldwork. I reflect on how my visual journal helped me understand how my body responded to living and working in extreme conditions, how my work and body relate to one another, and how the creation and completion of this journal gave me agency over my experiences of dissociation and queerness. Through this account, I aim to contribute to the growing literature on the personal and political dimensions of polar research—critical glaciology—as well as to demonstrate the potential of autoethnographic methods to facilitate embodied ways of knowing in deep field contexts.