用民族志消解偶然性的黏性:女性主义对被困在偶然性中的交叉性探索

Kelly Opdycke
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摘要

摘要:这篇女权主义民族志文章简要介绍了偶然性如何影响北岭加州州立大学传播研究系通识教育(GE)课程中的多样性。在Sara Ahmed(2012)、Roderick Ferguson(2012)等人提供的重要大学奖学金基础上,我探索了从事多元化工作的压力如何影响我所在部门不同身份的偶然教员。为此,我采取了一种交叉的方法来理解这些经历,希望展示一个人身份的不同部分如何使某些主题比其他主题更难教授,特别是通过不稳定性。同时,我说明了我的偶然位置如何与我的神经分化相交,使民族志过程特别具有挑战性。在《时间束缚》一书中,伊丽莎白·弗里曼(Elizabeth Freeman, 2010)探讨了这种对时间的篡夺如何影响那些不能或不想顺应新自由主义时代的人。弗里曼将这种对时间的特定取向给予特权的概念描述为时间规范性,或者说是机构利用时间来鼓励个人在时间内实现最大生产力的一种方式。我的神经分化和我的偶然性与时间规范期望相结合。当我再加上必要的时间来进行女权主义人种学的交叉研究时,我希望能产生一种能让我从偶然性中解脱出来的研究,这种希望同时感到既匆忙又停滞不前。我提供这篇文章,是为了一瞥偶然的教师在他们内部所持有的紧张关系。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Using Ethnography to Dissolve the Stickiness of Contingency: An Intersectional Feminist Exploration of Being Stuck in Contingency
Abstract:This feminist ethnographic piece offers a snapshot of how contingency impacts diversity work in General Education (GE) courses in the Communication Studies Department at California State University, Northridge. After grounding my work in critical university scholarship from Sara Ahmed (2012), Roderick Ferguson (2012), and others, I explore how the pressure to do diversity work impacts contingent faculty of various identities in my department. To this end, I take an intersectional approach to understanding these experiences in hopes of showing how various parts of one's identity might make certain topics more difficult to teach than others, especially through precarity.Concurrently, I illustrate how my contingent position intersects with my neurodivergency to make the ethnographic process especially challenging. In Time Binds, Elizabeth Freeman (2010) explores how this usurping of time affects those who cannot, or do not want to, conform to neoliberal time. Freeman describes this concept of privileging a certain orientation toward time as chrononormativity, or a way institutions use time to encourage maximum productivity of individuals within it. My neurodivergency combined with my contingency work against chrononormative expectations. When I add to this the time necessary to perform the intersectional work of feminist ethnography, my hopes of producing research that might unstick myself from contingency feels both rushed and stalled at the same time. I offer this essay as a glimpse of the tensions contingent faculty hold within them.
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