ABSTRACT

The shift to a neoliberal agenda has, for many academics, intensified the pressure and undermined the pleasure that their work can and does bring. This book contains stories from a range of autoethnographers seeking to challenge traditional academic discourse by providing personal and evocative writings that detail moments of profound transformation and change.

The book focuses on the experiences of one academic and the stories that her dialogues with other autoethnographers generated in response to the neoliberal shift in higher education. Chapters use a variety of genres to provide an innovative text that identifies strategies to challenge neoliberal governance. Autoethnography is as a methodology that can be used as form of resistance to this cultural shift by exploring effects on individual academic and personal lives. The stories are necessarily emotional, personal, important. It is hoped that they will promote other ways of navigating higher education that do not align with neoliberalism and instead, offer more holistic and human ways of being an academic.

This book highlights the impact of neoliberalism on academics’ freedom to teach and think freely. With 40% of academics in the UK considering other forms of employment, this book will be of interest to existing and future academics who want to survive the new environment and maintain their motivation and passion for academic life.

chapter |7 pages

Introduction

All the voices in my head

part Scene 1|74 pages

Jess Moriarty

chapter 3|16 pages

Walking and mapping our creative recovery

An interdisciplinary method

chapter 4|16 pages

Supporting our inner compass

An autoethnographic cartography

part Scene 2|37 pages

Jess Moriarty

chapter 5|17 pages

Reclaiming the book of spells

Storying the self as a form of resistance

chapter 6|16 pages

RISE up

Women sharing personal and shared stories to resist and heal

part Scene 3|66 pages

Jess Moriarty

chapter 7|12 pages

Writing to resist; writing to survive

Conversational autoethnography, mentoring and the New Public Management academy

chapter 8|17 pages

I found my mentor in a toilet

Sharing stories to share power

chapter 9|16 pages

Insecurity during and after the PhD

An autoethnography of mutual support

chapter 10|19 pages

The art of hula

Collaborative and embodied arts-based research as a way of moving through academic life

part Scene 4|25 pages

Jess Moriarty

chapter 11|21 pages

Reaching forward and back

Learning from our past as pedagogy in undergraduate creative writing teaching

part Scene 5|9 pages

Jess Moriarty

chapter |7 pages

Conclusion

Redondo – Redono, resipisco, removere lusorem