This article deploys a collective biographical methodology as a political and epistemological intervention in order to explore the emotional and affective politics of academic work for women in neoliberal universities. The managerial practices of contemporary universities tend to elevate disembodied reason over emotion; to repress, commodify, or co-opt emotional and affective labor; to increase individualization and competition among academic workers; and to disregard the relational work that the article suggests is essential for well-being at work. The apparent marginalization of feminist and feminine ways of being, thinking, and feeling in academia is examined through close readings of three narrative vignettes, which are based on memorie...
This article is the story of the simultaneous feminization and corporatization of universities, them...
Neoliberal ideologies, marketization and performative regimes ssociated with recent reforms in unive...
In this article, two female academics confront their role in producing their own invisibility and ir...
Universities are dominated by marketisation, individualisation and competition, forces inimical to i...
Universities are dominated by marketisation, individualisation and competition, forces inimical to i...
The methodology that we use, collective biography, brings together a group of researchers around a t...
Neoliberal ideologies, marketization and performative regimes associated with recent reforms in univ...
In this article five women explore (female) embodiment in academic work in current workplaces. In a ...
In this article five women explore (female) embodiment in academic work in current workplaces. In a ...
The ‘neoliberal turn’ in the higher education sector has received significant intellectual scrutiny ...
This book investigates the gendered dimensions of academic life in the contemporary Australian unive...
his book offers a contemporary account of what it means to inhabit academia as a privilege, risk, en...
Neoliberalism, precarious jobs, and control of work have multiple effects on academic identities as ...
This book reflects on academic life under a neoliberal regime. Through collaborative autoethnographi...
ABSTRACT This article is an attempt to rethink the interconnectedness between discourse and subjecti...
This article is the story of the simultaneous feminization and corporatization of universities, them...
Neoliberal ideologies, marketization and performative regimes ssociated with recent reforms in unive...
In this article, two female academics confront their role in producing their own invisibility and ir...
Universities are dominated by marketisation, individualisation and competition, forces inimical to i...
Universities are dominated by marketisation, individualisation and competition, forces inimical to i...
The methodology that we use, collective biography, brings together a group of researchers around a t...
Neoliberal ideologies, marketization and performative regimes associated with recent reforms in univ...
In this article five women explore (female) embodiment in academic work in current workplaces. In a ...
In this article five women explore (female) embodiment in academic work in current workplaces. In a ...
The ‘neoliberal turn’ in the higher education sector has received significant intellectual scrutiny ...
This book investigates the gendered dimensions of academic life in the contemporary Australian unive...
his book offers a contemporary account of what it means to inhabit academia as a privilege, risk, en...
Neoliberalism, precarious jobs, and control of work have multiple effects on academic identities as ...
This book reflects on academic life under a neoliberal regime. Through collaborative autoethnographi...
ABSTRACT This article is an attempt to rethink the interconnectedness between discourse and subjecti...
This article is the story of the simultaneous feminization and corporatization of universities, them...
Neoliberal ideologies, marketization and performative regimes ssociated with recent reforms in unive...
In this article, two female academics confront their role in producing their own invisibility and ir...