Abstract
This article explores the features and potential of an embodied, rather than merely skills-based, approach to doctoral writing. The authors’ conceptual framework is derived from the phenomenological literature, particularly Heidegger's critique of modern life as permeated by a quest for mastery and control. They address two key questions with respect to this: Firstly, what role might the quest for mastery as achieving command or control play in impeding writing and undermining an embodied writerly practice? Secondly, to what extent might narrow skills-based approaches to writing unwittingly promote the quest for mastery and therefore encourage, rather than diminish, the anxieties that doctoral research writers may feel?