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E-grāmata: Novice LGBTQ+ Scholars' Practices in Writing for Scholarly Publication

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"This collection brings together perspectives from early-career LGBTQ+ scholars as they navigate the scholarly publishing landscape, highlighting their experiences and challenges toward providing greater representation within the academic community and existing scholarship. The volume reflects on the ways in which scholarly output is intricately linked with scholarly identity and the challenges LGBTQ+ scholars face when their scholarly and gender and sexual identities can often seem to be in conflict. The book showcases perspectives from doctoral students and early-career scholars from around the world working across different disciplines, supported by case studies, autoethnographic narratives, and discourse analysis, to explore key issues facing those who identify as LGBTQ+ or who wish to research and publish on topics relating to gender and sexual identity. These include negotiating positionality, the role of writing styles in identity construction for queer scholars, the ways in which publishing gatekeepers perpetuate heteronormativity, and the part support networks play for researchers. The book gives voice to a wider range of scholars toward creating a more inclusive publishing environment and will be of interest to students and researchers who identify as LGBTQ+ and those working in such fields as applied linguistics, English for academic purposes, queer theory, and gender studies"--

This collection brings together perspectives from early-career LGBTQ+ scholars as they navigate the scholarly publishing landscape, highlighting their experiences and challenges in providing greater representation within the academic community and existing scholarship.

The volume reflects on the ways in which scholarly output is intricately linked with scholarly identity and the challenges LGBTQ+ scholars face when their scholarly and gender and sexual identities can often seem to be in conflict. The book showcases perspectives from doctoral students and early-career scholars from around the world working across different disciplines, supported by case studies, autoethnographic narratives, and discourse analysis, to explore key issues facing those who identify as LGBTQ+ or who wish to research and publish on topics relating to gender and sexual identity. These include negotiating positionality, the role of writing styles in identity construction for queer scholars, the ways in which publishing gatekeepers perpetuate heteronormativity, and the part support networks play for researchers.

The book gives voice to a wider range of scholars towards creating a more inclusive publishing environment and will be of interest to students and researchers who identify as LGBTQ+ and those working in such fields as applied linguistics, English for academic purposes, queer theory, and gender studies.



The volume reflects on the ways in which scholarly output is intricately linked with scholarly identity and the challenges LGBTQ+ scholars face when their scholarly and gender and sexual identities can often seem to be in conflict.

Contents

List of Contributors

1. About scholarly publication and early-career LGBTQ+ scholars

Sharon McCulloch

SECTION 1: Challenges and solutions

2. Fighting for authenticity along the LGBTQ+ journey towards scholarly
publication: Is it time for a queering of academic literacies?
Micky Ross

3. Blooming with Brazilian queer studies: Reflecting on experiences of
co-authoring and publishing with LGBTQ+ academics
Luan Carpes Barros Cassal

4. The perpetuation of heteropatriarchal dynamics in scholarly gatekeeping:
Analysing reviewers feedback from the perspective of LGBTQ+ early-career
scholars
Helena Torres-Purroy and Sņnia Mas-Alcolea

5. Marginalising the marginalised: Challenges of embarking on LGBTQ+-related
research for publication

Jamie David Hopkin and Victoria Barnett-Simpson

6. Support networks and open discussions about academic publishing: Dealing
with difficult data and (potential) collaborators

Frazer Heritage

SECTION 2: Visibility and intersectionality

7. Living straight, writing queer: Experiences with academic publishing as a
closeted Indian woman
Arunima Theraja

8. Coming out as queer: Troubling the strictures for early-career researchers
in academic publishing

Tierney Marey

9. Researching and publishing on African sexualities: Methods and challenges

Zanele Nyoni-Wood

10. Academic publishing as a novice lesbian scholar: An intersectional
experience

Mabel Encinas

11. Conclusion and final thoughts

Sharon McCulloch

Index
Sharon McCulloch is a senior lecturer in language and education in the School of Psychology and Humanities at the University of Central Lancashire in the UK. Her research interests lie in EAP and academic literacies, especially how second language student writers learn to write and the ways in which institutional and social contexts, including gender and geolinguistic status, affect professional academic writers.