Description

Book Synopsis

Career Narratives and Academic Womanhood is a collection of essays in which life writing scholars theorize their early-career, mid-career, and late-career experiences with the documents that shape their professional lives as women: the institutional auto/biography of employment letters, curriculum vitae, tenure portfolios, promotion applications, publication and conference bios, academic website profiles, and other self-authored narratives required by institutions to compete for opportunities and resources. The essays explore the privacy laws, peer review, disciplinary standards, digital media, and other standardizing tools, practices and policies that impact women's self-construction at pivotal junctures at which they promote themselves in the spaces of academic careers.



Trade Review

“The essays in Career Narratives and Academic Womanhood cast light on the exhausting demand that women squeeze their lives into the metrics of academic success. By highlighting how forms that purport to quantify and document women’s academic success obscure their actual lives and labor, they map out the pitfalls of translating life into career narratives that structurally disadvantage women. Against the mandatory uses of life writing in institutional forms of evaluation, the writers develop feminist and intersectional ways to make their work count otherwise.”

--Leigh Gilmore, author of The #Me Too Effect (2023) and the newly rereleased The Limits of Autobiography (2023)

“The auto/biographical essays in this provocative collection document the persistence of stifling patriarchal norms and forms in the western academy. More importantly, they also document the many shrewd stratagems women faculty on three continents have devised to subvert “the official story” the patriarchal academy decrees. Kudos to Ortiz-Vilarelle and her penetrating colleagues!”

--Joycelyn Moody, Denman Distinguished Chair in American Literature at the University of Texas at San Antonio and editor of A History of African American Autobiography (2021).

“Across the span of their careers, academic women are required to produce narratives of their professional lives, their quantifiable scholarly achievements, research agendas, teaching philosophies, service histories, future plans. They now find themselves curating academic self-presentations across a number of digital platforms. These are narrated lives constrained by professional and institutional norms. In this edgy, provocative collection, Career Narratives and Academic Womanhood: In the Spaces Provided, Lisa Ortiz-Vilarelle presents women academics mobilizing scholarly knowledge of autobiography studies, feminist theory, critical race studies, and ethnography to probe the sociocultural politics of evaluative self-narration and -promotion within the neoliberal university, with its enduring masculinist and racialized model of belonging and success. Sometimes focus turns to critique of suffocating expectations of self-narration in standardized modes, the tenure dossier, the academic CV. Sometimes emphasis falls on the agentic forging of alternative practices of self-presentation in counter-forms and media, among them academic selfie, collaborative narration, and curation of autobiographical objects in women’s offices. Collectively, these forays into autotheory and autoethnography ground the larger message, for all professional women, about the politics of stultifying norms and the joys of everyday autobiographical practices that acknowledge and incorporate material, expressive, multimedial, poetic, and collective means of knowing oneself in often inhospitable spaces.”

--Sidonie Smith, Mary Fair Croushore Professor of the Humanities at the University of Michigan, USA and Director of the Institute for Humanities.



Table of Contents

Introduction: The Unlikely Autobiography of Women’s Career Documentation

LISA ORTIZ-VILARELLE

1 Vitae Statistics: The Anti-Autobiographical Imperative of Academic Self-Documentation

AIMEE MORRISON

2 Docile Bodies (of Work): Coaxing the Neoliberal Academic via the Online Researcher Profile

EMMA MAGUIRE

3 Sign ‘In the Space Provided’: Academic Email Signatures as Sites of Narrative, Branding, and Refusal?

MAY FRIEDMAN AND JENNIFER POOLE

4 Messing with the Metrics and Setting Our Own Standards: Academic Women’s Efforts to Reframe Success

ALISON L. BLACK, SANDRA ELSOM, AND VICKI SCHRIEVER

5 ‘Making Spreadsheets Won’t Get You Tenure’: Autoethnography, Women Administrative Faculty, and the Genres That Make Them (In)Visible

CANDIS BOND

6 ‘Not Another ARC Summer’: Grant Applications and Life Narratives of Motherhood

KATE DOUGLAS

7 Academic Motherhood and the Complex Banalities of a Curriculum Vitae

LEENA KÄOSAAR

8 Getting an Academic Life: The Untranslatable, or How to Curate a Polish-Canadian CV

EVA C. KARPINSKI

9 Crossing the Lines: Using Personnel File Documents to Negotiate Embodied Space

CYNTHIA HUFF

10 How a Lifetime of Academic Administration Gave Me the Freedom to Write a Sisterlocking Academic Memoir: An Interview with Valerie Lee

VALERIE LEE WITH JULIA WATSON

11 The Poetic Cover Letter: On Crafting Paradoxical Personas

VICKI HALLETT

12 Mothers and Myths: A Collaborative Autoethnographic Account of Navigating Domestic Academic Life

VANESSA MARR AND JESS MORIARTY

13 Post-it as Praxis: Counternarrating Non-linearity and Multiplicity in Academic Lives

ELIZABETH RODRIGUES AND MARION WOLFE

14 Dossiers in Crip Time: Reclaiming a Space for Crazy in the Academy

ALLY DAY

15 The Same Self/ie: Blurring Academic, Creative, and Personal Identity through the Taking and Sharing of Self-Portraits

MARINA DELLER

16 Spilling Out of the Spaces Provided: How Occupying the Academic Office Becomes an Autobiographical Act

LAURA BEARD AND LISA ORTIZ-VILARELLE

Career Narratives and Academic Womanhood

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    A Hardback by Lisa Ortiz-Vilarelle

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      View other formats and editions of Career Narratives and Academic Womanhood by Lisa Ortiz-Vilarelle

      Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
      Publication Date: 12/12/2023 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9781032146805, 978-1032146805
      ISBN10: 103214680X

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Career Narratives and Academic Womanhood is a collection of essays in which life writing scholars theorize their early-career, mid-career, and late-career experiences with the documents that shape their professional lives as women: the institutional auto/biography of employment letters, curriculum vitae, tenure portfolios, promotion applications, publication and conference bios, academic website profiles, and other self-authored narratives required by institutions to compete for opportunities and resources. The essays explore the privacy laws, peer review, disciplinary standards, digital media, and other standardizing tools, practices and policies that impact women's self-construction at pivotal junctures at which they promote themselves in the spaces of academic careers.



      Trade Review

      “The essays in Career Narratives and Academic Womanhood cast light on the exhausting demand that women squeeze their lives into the metrics of academic success. By highlighting how forms that purport to quantify and document women’s academic success obscure their actual lives and labor, they map out the pitfalls of translating life into career narratives that structurally disadvantage women. Against the mandatory uses of life writing in institutional forms of evaluation, the writers develop feminist and intersectional ways to make their work count otherwise.”

      --Leigh Gilmore, author of The #Me Too Effect (2023) and the newly rereleased The Limits of Autobiography (2023)

      “The auto/biographical essays in this provocative collection document the persistence of stifling patriarchal norms and forms in the western academy. More importantly, they also document the many shrewd stratagems women faculty on three continents have devised to subvert “the official story” the patriarchal academy decrees. Kudos to Ortiz-Vilarelle and her penetrating colleagues!”

      --Joycelyn Moody, Denman Distinguished Chair in American Literature at the University of Texas at San Antonio and editor of A History of African American Autobiography (2021).

      “Across the span of their careers, academic women are required to produce narratives of their professional lives, their quantifiable scholarly achievements, research agendas, teaching philosophies, service histories, future plans. They now find themselves curating academic self-presentations across a number of digital platforms. These are narrated lives constrained by professional and institutional norms. In this edgy, provocative collection, Career Narratives and Academic Womanhood: In the Spaces Provided, Lisa Ortiz-Vilarelle presents women academics mobilizing scholarly knowledge of autobiography studies, feminist theory, critical race studies, and ethnography to probe the sociocultural politics of evaluative self-narration and -promotion within the neoliberal university, with its enduring masculinist and racialized model of belonging and success. Sometimes focus turns to critique of suffocating expectations of self-narration in standardized modes, the tenure dossier, the academic CV. Sometimes emphasis falls on the agentic forging of alternative practices of self-presentation in counter-forms and media, among them academic selfie, collaborative narration, and curation of autobiographical objects in women’s offices. Collectively, these forays into autotheory and autoethnography ground the larger message, for all professional women, about the politics of stultifying norms and the joys of everyday autobiographical practices that acknowledge and incorporate material, expressive, multimedial, poetic, and collective means of knowing oneself in often inhospitable spaces.”

      --Sidonie Smith, Mary Fair Croushore Professor of the Humanities at the University of Michigan, USA and Director of the Institute for Humanities.



      Table of Contents

      Introduction: The Unlikely Autobiography of Women’s Career Documentation

      LISA ORTIZ-VILARELLE

      1 Vitae Statistics: The Anti-Autobiographical Imperative of Academic Self-Documentation

      AIMEE MORRISON

      2 Docile Bodies (of Work): Coaxing the Neoliberal Academic via the Online Researcher Profile

      EMMA MAGUIRE

      3 Sign ‘In the Space Provided’: Academic Email Signatures as Sites of Narrative, Branding, and Refusal?

      MAY FRIEDMAN AND JENNIFER POOLE

      4 Messing with the Metrics and Setting Our Own Standards: Academic Women’s Efforts to Reframe Success

      ALISON L. BLACK, SANDRA ELSOM, AND VICKI SCHRIEVER

      5 ‘Making Spreadsheets Won’t Get You Tenure’: Autoethnography, Women Administrative Faculty, and the Genres That Make Them (In)Visible

      CANDIS BOND

      6 ‘Not Another ARC Summer’: Grant Applications and Life Narratives of Motherhood

      KATE DOUGLAS

      7 Academic Motherhood and the Complex Banalities of a Curriculum Vitae

      LEENA KÄOSAAR

      8 Getting an Academic Life: The Untranslatable, or How to Curate a Polish-Canadian CV

      EVA C. KARPINSKI

      9 Crossing the Lines: Using Personnel File Documents to Negotiate Embodied Space

      CYNTHIA HUFF

      10 How a Lifetime of Academic Administration Gave Me the Freedom to Write a Sisterlocking Academic Memoir: An Interview with Valerie Lee

      VALERIE LEE WITH JULIA WATSON

      11 The Poetic Cover Letter: On Crafting Paradoxical Personas

      VICKI HALLETT

      12 Mothers and Myths: A Collaborative Autoethnographic Account of Navigating Domestic Academic Life

      VANESSA MARR AND JESS MORIARTY

      13 Post-it as Praxis: Counternarrating Non-linearity and Multiplicity in Academic Lives

      ELIZABETH RODRIGUES AND MARION WOLFE

      14 Dossiers in Crip Time: Reclaiming a Space for Crazy in the Academy

      ALLY DAY

      15 The Same Self/ie: Blurring Academic, Creative, and Personal Identity through the Taking and Sharing of Self-Portraits

      MARINA DELLER

      16 Spilling Out of the Spaces Provided: How Occupying the Academic Office Becomes an Autobiographical Act

      LAURA BEARD AND LISA ORTIZ-VILARELLE

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