Political Writing as Transformation Openings to enhanced focus, creative practice and new social imaginations

  • Erzsebet Strausz

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What might it mean to inhabit the process of writing as transformational practice? How can we turn an everyday skill into a site of exploration and discovery, and what may be the individual and collective benefits of doing so? What implications might it have to expand our ability to sense and make sense of what surrounds us, not only for enriching our own experience but also for navigating and potentially, transforming social relationships?

This course is built around two main aims, each facilitated by a series of guided, timed writing processes.

1. Experiential diagnostics

This course begins by offering a conceptual framework and a series of experiential anchor points for probing deeper into how contemporary social imaginations and structures of government – such as late capitalism, security apparatuses, surveillance, bordering practices – impact upon our bodies, minds, lived experiences and particularly, on how we use our attention. The demands of the ‘attention economy’ fragments our ability to sustain an engaged, open, and compassionate relationship to others, ourselves and the world. With that, it limits our sociological imagination: the capacity to recognize and envision more accommodating, caring and creative worlds. Experiential diagnostics maps out ways into locating seemingly abstract forces and concepts as living, felt, relatable moments in everyday life. This modality of embodied research places special emphasis on our own involvement and entanglement within them, which are both collectively constituted and deeply personal.

2. Creative remaking

Becoming aware of the ways in which social structures affect how we think and feel, how we imagine and construct what we deem to be (im)possible and (un)desirable, as well as our habits and routines that we may no longer reflect on, is already key in opening to alternative modes of perception and conduct, within both our professional and personal lives. Drawing on the power of writing as a form of presencing, this course makes available a series of guided writing practices that have the potential to open up remedial pathways for remaking experience, rewiring our modes of operation and redrawing the contours of our imaginative horizons. Through these writing processes, which re-center attention on the ‘here and now’ and with that, assist in embracing the actuality of what we carry within ourselves, our potential to ‘think outside the box’ and craft gentler, more self-aware, and resourceful forms of being can be accessed and cultivated. While these practices have grown out of innovative pedagogy, narrative methods of social inquiry and academic concerns within the discipline of International Relations, they have been designed and developed with a view to help unlock creativity and facilitate transformational experiences in all professional fields and personal processes, enabling new understandings and orientations.

Introduction

This video looks at the process of writing as transformational practice and how we can turn an everyday skill into a site of exploration and discovery.

About The Author

Erzsebet Strausz

Erzsebet Strausz is an assistant professor in the Department of International Relations at Central European University in Budapest, where she teaches MA courses on international relations theory, international security and critical approaches. She holds a PhD from Aberystwyth University and her dissertation received the British International Studies Association’s Michael Nicholson Thesis Prize in 2013.

 

About this video

Author(s)
Erzsebet Strausz
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-53600-7
Online ISBN
978-3-031-53600-7
Total duration
42 min
Publisher
Palgrave Macmillan
Copyright information
© The Editor(s) (if applicable) and The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2024

Video Transcript

Did you know that the act of writing is working with our attention? How we use our attention is closely related to both our well-being and creativity. In this course, I’ll be your guide into three transformational writing processes to turn an everyday skill in our profession into a site of exploration and discovery.

I’m Erzsébet Strausz. I research critical pedagogy and alternative knowledge practices in world politics, using creative and narrative research methods. I also collaborate with artists, NGOs, and communities in co-creating empowering processes. In this course, using writing, we will work with our personal attention economies to understand where our attention goes habitually, what is blocking our focus, and where and how we get stuck.

Next, we will transform limiting patterns, learn how to pay attention to what we want to pay attention to consciously, and develop more life-enhancing practices, both as individuals and communities. This course is for you if you feel stuck in a work project or life project, or would like to experience how to use writing for better focus and more creativity in research, teaching, and everyday life. Thank you for listening and welcome to the course!