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Feminist Responses to the Neoliberalization of the University: From Surviving to Thriving [Mīkstie vāki]

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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 198 pages, height x width x depth: 218x154x15 mm, weight: 304 g, 1 BW Photos
  • Izdošanas datums: 23-Jun-2021
  • Izdevniecība: Lexington Books
  • ISBN-10: 1793610398
  • ISBN-13: 9781793610393
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  • Mīkstie vāki
  • Cena: 48,21 €
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 198 pages, height x width x depth: 218x154x15 mm, weight: 304 g, 1 BW Photos
  • Izdošanas datums: 23-Jun-2021
  • Izdevniecība: Lexington Books
  • ISBN-10: 1793610398
  • ISBN-13: 9781793610393
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
This book argues that neoliberal discourses prevalent in higher education seek to undermine, commodify, and co-opt the radical, transformative work that many gender and womens studies departments, programs, and centers are doing. The contributors to the collection discuss their responses to these challenges in and out of the classrooms, from mentorship and activism to active allyship and experimental pedagogies. They aim to inspire a new wave of feminist consciousness raising that will encourage transformative ways of engaging with the university and serve as doorways to new understandings of productivity and creativity.

Recenzijas

With intersectional feminist ferocity, this powerful, impassioned collection asks what a university would look like if it actually cared about the marginalized, while it unsparingly displays higher education's race to the bottom by a thousand neoliberal cuts. Foregrounding WOC, LGBTQ+, first-generation, working-class, Jewish, and indigenous voices and experiences, the chapters unflinchingly confront what it means to attempt social justice research and pedagogy amidst literally ceaseless budget "crises". Seamlessly weaving the sublimity of our longings for a more just world with a clear-eyed stare at the ridiculous corporate logic that has swamped university functions, this collection is essential reading for students, faculty, administrators, and anybody who cares about higher education. -- Karen Kelsky, Founder and CEO of The Professor Is In Using narratives of professional and personal experiences in academic settings, this book illuminates sites of creative resistance within the neoliberal academy. The contributors offer analyses that are simultaneously challenging, disheartening, and inspiring. They ask readers to consider how academic norms can limit inclusivity and broad participation; they also offer strategies for marginalized academics to reform or make a home within academic settings. These narratives show readers the significant costs to marginalized students, staff, and faculty when social purposes of higher education are replaced by market-driven ones. Read optimistically, however, they also point to the cracks in our institutions that might just someday allow light to shine through. -- Rebecca Ropers, University of Minnesota

Acknowledgments ix
Introduction 1(10)
1 Lavender Carhartts: Queer Work within and outside the Academy
11(8)
Anne Balay
2 Neoliberalism in Higher Education and Its Effects on Marginalized Students
19(12)
Dejah S. Carter
3 Promoting Feminist Labor in Academe's Culture of Compliance
31(16)
April Lidinsky
4 "Neutral" Student Grievance Processes in White Supremacist Institutions of Higher Education
47(16)
Farhana Loonat
5 Planting Seeds of Trans Inclusion: A Conversation with Meghan Buell of TREES, Inc.
63(22)
Meghan Buell
Pam Butler
6 Laboring in Line with Our Values: Lessons Learned in the Struggle to Unionize
85(26)
Sonia De La Cruz
Nini Hayes
Sonalini Sapra
7 Feminist Future Making and Nomadic Subjectivity in the Academy
111(12)
Lauren J. Lacey
8 Sovereignty as an Indigenous Feminist Intervention
123(14)
Amanda Griffin Linsenmeyer
9 There Is No Surviving without Thriving
137(16)
Abby Palko
10 Compadrazgo and the Wild Woman: An Argument for the Creative Collective as Radical Support for Women in the Academy
153(8)
Leslie Contreras Schwartz
11 Fighting Shanda: A Jewish Mother Academic's Positionality and Practice at a Catholic Women's College
161(14)
Jamie Wagman
Index 175(8)
About the Editors 183(2)
About the Contributors 185
Abby Palko is director of the Maxine Platzer Lynn Women's Center at the University of Virginia. Sonalini Sapra is assistant director of the Center for Principled Problem Solving and Excellence in Teaching at Guilford College and adjunct assistant professor of political science.

Jamie Wagman is associate professor and chair of gender and womens studies and history at Saint Marys College.