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The marketised university and the politics of motherhood

Version 4 2024-03-12, 15:08
Version 3 2023-10-29, 11:34
journal contribution
posted on 2024-03-12, 15:08 authored by Sarah Amsler, Sara C. Motta

In this paper, we offer a critique of neoliberal power from the perspective of the gendered, sexualised, raced and classed politics of motherhood in English universities. By using dialogical autoethnographic methods to examine our own past experiences as full-time employed mother–academics, we demonstrate how feminist academic praxis can not only help make the gendered workings of neoliberal power more visible, but also enable us to nurture and sustain alternative ways of being and working in, against and outside the university. Far from desiring greater inclusion into a system which enshrines repressive logics of productivity and reproduces gendered subjectivities, inequalities, silences and exclusions, we aim to refuse and transgress it by bringing feminist critiques of knowledge, labour and neoliberalism to bear on how we understand our own experiences of motherhood in the academic world.

History

School affiliated with

  • University of Lincoln (Historic Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Gender and Education

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

ISSN

0954-0253

eISSN

1360-0516

Date Submitted

2017-02-15

Date Accepted

2017-01-31

Date of First Publication

2017-03-30

Date of Final Publication

2018-12-25

Date Document First Uploaded

2017-02-08

ePrints ID

26375