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Using body mapping within a participatory methodology to enable autistic girls to share their experiences of education: considerations for social justice, embodied awareness, and knowledge production

Using body mapping within a participatory methodology to enable autistic girls to share their experiences of education: considerations for social justice, embodied awareness, and knowledge production
Using body mapping within a participatory methodology to enable autistic girls to share their experiences of education: considerations for social justice, embodied awareness, and knowledge production
Body mapping is an arts-based method designed to foreground how people feel rather than what they think. Body mapping can support the surfacing of often unheard or otherwise inaccessible or suppressed experiences because meaning making is non-spoken as well as spoken. For marginalised groups, where power imbalances between the researchers and the researched may be considerable, body mapping is argued to be one way in which participants can contribute on their own terms. Autistic people report distinctive embodied subjectivities of the world, often due to sensory differences. Body mapping may be a method that is well suited to exploring these embodied subjectivities with autistic young people whose experiences tend to be marginalised or overlooked. Most body mapping research has focused on health-related topics with very little application in education or with autistic young people. This paper reports on the use of body mapping to explore school and transition experiences with 11 neurodivergent young people in the UK: 8 girls and 3 boys aged 11-17 years, nine with autism diagnoses. We evaluate our application of body mapping according to its potential for (1) exploring embodied awareness (2) enabling social justice and (3) supporting knowledge production and translation.
autism, Body mapping, creative methods, transitions, voice
1743-727X
East, Chloe
f8d043ff-5a5b-4562-bdf3-09f41d226d64
Parsons, Sarah
5af3382f-cda3-489c-a336-9604f3c04d7d
Kovshoff, Hanna
82c321ee-d151-40c5-8dde-281af59f2142
East, Chloe
f8d043ff-5a5b-4562-bdf3-09f41d226d64
Parsons, Sarah
5af3382f-cda3-489c-a336-9604f3c04d7d
Kovshoff, Hanna
82c321ee-d151-40c5-8dde-281af59f2142

East, Chloe, Parsons, Sarah and Kovshoff, Hanna (2026) Using body mapping within a participatory methodology to enable autistic girls to share their experiences of education: considerations for social justice, embodied awareness, and knowledge production. International Journal of Research and Method in Education. (doi:10.1080/1743727X.2026.2651336).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Body mapping is an arts-based method designed to foreground how people feel rather than what they think. Body mapping can support the surfacing of often unheard or otherwise inaccessible or suppressed experiences because meaning making is non-spoken as well as spoken. For marginalised groups, where power imbalances between the researchers and the researched may be considerable, body mapping is argued to be one way in which participants can contribute on their own terms. Autistic people report distinctive embodied subjectivities of the world, often due to sensory differences. Body mapping may be a method that is well suited to exploring these embodied subjectivities with autistic young people whose experiences tend to be marginalised or overlooked. Most body mapping research has focused on health-related topics with very little application in education or with autistic young people. This paper reports on the use of body mapping to explore school and transition experiences with 11 neurodivergent young people in the UK: 8 girls and 3 boys aged 11-17 years, nine with autism diagnoses. We evaluate our application of body mapping according to its potential for (1) exploring embodied awareness (2) enabling social justice and (3) supporting knowledge production and translation.

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East et al Bodymapping paper AUTHOR ACCEPTED 4th March 2026 - Accepted Manuscript
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 4 March 2026
e-pub ahead of print date: 2 April 2026
Keywords: autism, Body mapping, creative methods, transitions, voice

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 511321
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/511321
ISSN: 1743-727X
PURE UUID: c630ea75-9625-422b-a264-ed0bfddd4eb4
ORCID for Chloe East: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-5736-1411
ORCID for Sarah Parsons: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2542-4745
ORCID for Hanna Kovshoff: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-6041-0376

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Date deposited: 12 May 2026 16:32
Last modified: 13 May 2026 01:44

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