新自由主义大学中的偶发性残疾:加拿大背景下的故事

IF 3.9 1区 社会学 Q2 MANAGEMENT Gender Work and Organization Pub Date : 2023-05-13 DOI:10.1111/gwao.13009
Carla Rice, Elisabeth Harrison, Carla Giddings, Sally Chivers, Sonia Meerai, Hilde Zitzelsberger
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文探讨了加拿大新自由主义学院是如何创造和强化情节残疾(ED)的,存在于其中,并将其推出。ED是一个总括性术语,指一系列以波动和不可预测性为特征的身体、心理和神经疾病。超过200万工作年龄的加拿大人受到ED的影响,其中女性更有可能受到影响。为了考虑ED如何与中学后教育互动,我们将女性主义的残疾理论,即具体的不确定性、危机时间和残疾正义,与患有ED的中学后女性工作者创作的多媒体故事进行对话,故事制作者将她们的创作情境化和理论化,并揭示她们复杂的具体和嵌入的经历。我们从两个研究项目中产生的故事中选择了这些故事,这两个项目的重点是转变残疾的负面概念,以作为一个体现不确定性的“档案”,挑战ED在学院中的消失。我们用这些故事来分析性别化和种族化学术机构中的权力和阻力,围绕三个重叠的主题:新自由主义大学的弱势和脆弱性;新自由主义时代与具体化时代的断层线;以及在新自由主义学院产生和推出的ED。考虑到新自由主义下ED和中学后教育之间的相互关系,我们认为女权主义残疾理论和正义实践挑战了削弱和排斥的期望,这些期望伤害了学院内外的ED患者。
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Episodic disability in the neoliberal university: Stories from the Canadian context

This article explores how episodic disability (ED) is created and intensified by, present within, and pushed out of the neoliberalized academy in Canada. ED is an umbrella term for a range of physical, mental, and neurological conditions characterized by fluctuation and unpredictability. Over two million working-age Canadians are affected by ED, with women more likely to be impacted. To consider how ED interacts with post-secondary education, we put feminist disability theories of embodied precarity, crip time, and disability justice into conversation with multimedia stories created by post-secondary women workers with EDs, with story-makers contextualizing and theorizing their creations, and revealing their complex embodied and embedded experiences. We chose these from stories generated in two research projects focused on transforming negative concepts of disability to serve as an “archivy” of embodied precarity that challenges ED's erasure in the academy. We think with the stories to analyze power and resistance in and on gendered and raced academic bodies along three overlapping themes: debility and vulnerability in the neoliberal university; fault-lines of neoliberal time and embodied time; and EDs as produced in, and pushed out of, the neoliberal academy. Considering interrelations between ED and post-secondary education under neoliberalism, we argue that feminist disability theory and justice praxis challenge debilitating and exclusionary expectations that harm people with EDs in and outside of the academy.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
11.50
自引率
13.80%
发文量
139
期刊介绍: Gender, Work & Organization is a bimonthly peer-reviewed academic journal. The journal was established in 1994 and is published by John Wiley & Sons. It covers research on the role of gender on the workfloor. In addition to the regular issues, the journal publishes several special issues per year and has new section, Feminist Frontiers,dedicated to contemporary conversations and topics in feminism.
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