The performative dimension of teaching and the classroom as a site of action
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.5935/2177-6644.20260037Abstract
The text analyzes teaching in Primary Education as a performative practice shaped by bodily, affective, and gendered dimensions. From an autobiographical and critical perspective, it highlights the overload that falls mainly on female teachers, who are responsible for tasks that go beyond teaching, such as care and emotional mediation. Combined with gender inequalities and the precarization intensified by managerial policies and digital platforms, these demands produce physical and emotional exhaustion. Drawing on performance studies, the classroom is understood as a space of restored behaviors, where gestures, rituals, and improvisations constitute teaching work.
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