“You Can Be Creative Once You Are Tenured”: Counterstories of Academic Writing From Mid-Career Women Faculty of Color

IF 0.5 Q4 SOCIOLOGY
Rebecca Covarrubias, Xiaoxia Newton, Tehia S. Glass
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Academic writing is a critical activity through which scholars establish their stature in the field with ensuing academic successes. These “successes” rely on conventions that determine what questions are important to ask, what is the most rigorous methodology to employ, what constitutes “good” quality writing, and who is our most important audience. We offer counterstories of how we, three mid-career women faculty of color, navigated conventions of academic writing. We unpack how some conventions limit rather than empower us to exercise our creativity and to claim writing for ourselves and for our communities. We employ counter-storytelling to document a collective reality and to reimagine what constitutes “good” academic writing. Our stories range from challenging dominant and mainstream norms of evaluation and research, to learning to find one’s voice in writing, to navigating racist feedback in the peer-review process. Synthesizing across our cases, we conclude with recommendations for reimagining research communication.
“一旦你获得终身教职,你就可以很有创造力”:有色人种职业生涯中期女性学术写作的反例
学术写作是一项重要的活动,通过它,学者们在该领域建立了自己的地位,并取得了学术上的成功。这些“成功”依赖于惯例,这些惯例决定了什么问题是重要的,什么是最严格的方法,什么是“好”质量的写作,以及谁是我们最重要的受众。我们反驳了我们三位职业中期的有色人种女性教师如何驾驭学术写作的惯例。我们揭示了一些惯例是如何限制而不是授权我们发挥创造力,并为自己和我们的社区主张写作的。我们采用反叙事来记录集体现实,并重新想象什么是“好的”学术写作。我们的故事从挑战主流和主流的评估和研究规范,到学会在写作中找到自己的声音,再到在同行评审过程中引导种族主义反馈。综合我们的案例,我们最后提出了重新构想研究交流的建议。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.30
自引率
16.70%
发文量
15
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