'Genealogies are much written 'about' but seldom done. Maria Tamboukou's work is an exciting and innovative genealogy of women educators, full of insights into their lives. It is Foucauldian scholarship at its best, working both as a substantive history and as a guide to the genealogical method. Maria Tamboukou shows us what a genealogical history can look like and what it can do.' - Stephen J Ball, Karl Mannheim Professor of Sociology of Education, University of London, Institute of Education, UK
'...is entertaining, rigorous, and useful as a research exemplar'. - Sue Middleton, Gender and Education
List of Illustrations Acknowledgements Introduction: Situated Histories of the Female Self Feminist Genealogies in the Writing of the Self Spacing the Female Self: Tracing Heterotopias Erasing Sexuality From the Blackboard? Genealogies as Histories of the Present Technologies of the Female Self Notes Bibliography
MARIA TAMBOUKOU is Senior Lectuer in Psychosocial Studies and Co-Director of the Centre for Narrative Research in the Social Sciences, University of East London, UK. She received her PhD from King's College, University of London, UK. Her publications and research interests are in the sociology of gender and education, gender and space and the exploration of foucauldian and deleuzian analytics and the use of auto/biographical narratives in research. She is co-editor with Stephen J. Ball of Dangerous Encounters: Genealogy and Ethnography.