ABSTRACT

Examining common assumptions and routines through the lens of critical theory, the authors question several aspects of graduate education, including the conception of graduate students as institutional capital; institutionalized prejudice based on age, gender, sexual orientation, race and class; and competing power and value systems. The authors allow students to tell their own stories, thus humanizing the results of abuses generated by a flawed system. Finding a current exploitation of students unconscionable, Hinchey and Kimmel call for a new vision of graduate education, one in which students are valued and treated as unique and vibrant individuals

chapter Chapter 1|23 pages

Problems and Perspectives

chapter Chapter 2|20 pages

Sources of Institutional Power

Constructed Consciousness, Hegemony, and Reification

chapter Chapter 3|18 pages

Institutional Cultures and Power

The Minefield of Conflicting Identities

chapter Chapter 4|26 pages

Culture and Oppression

The “Other” as Graduate Student

chapter Chapter 5|19 pages

Power and the Dissertation

Faculty as Demigods

chapter Chapter 6|26 pages

Voices of the Oppressed 1

chapter Chapter 7|30 pages

How Might Things be Otherwise?