#女孩在大学里忙碌:创业女性主义、后女权主义和危机时期“女性成功”的表象

IF 1.7 2区 社会学 Q1 CULTURAL STUDIES
Kim Allen, Kirsty Finn
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引用次数: 1

摘要

在高等教育危机日益严重、新冠肺炎疫情的经济影响以及青年和毕业生劳动力市场长期不稳定的背景下,过去两年来,针对年轻女性的灵活、创业和往往以数字为媒介的自谋职业形式,包括“副业”,得到了越来越多的关注和推广。随着媒体宣称“大学的副业已经成熟”,大学本身也开始嵌入一些举措,这些举措似乎有助于学生在将激情转化为创业项目时发起“学生副业”。在毕业生成绩越来越不确定的背景下,学生的忙碌被认为是一种可行的方式,不仅可以在学习时补充收入,还可以投资于未来的就业能力。在这篇文章中,我们将学生群体的兴起与更广泛的后女权主义景观联系起来,在这一景观中,(年轻)女性被邀请通过“激情工作”、经济自主和时间自由的承诺从事创业性的自营职业。我们证明,在高等教育的背景下,由于研究生成绩的下降,女性人数超过男性,并且在学位科目中占主导地位,这些科目越来越被贴上“低价值”的标签,机构对参与学生群体的煽动明显是性别化的。至关重要的是,我们认为,这种对学生群体的推动——女性成为创业主义的“海报女孩”——有助于促进和维持后女权主义成功的神话和理想,同时掩盖当代高等教育和毕业生劳动力市场的持续危机和性别不平等。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
#GirlBossing the university side hustle: Entrepreneurial femininities, postfeminism and the veneer of ‘female success’ in times of crisis
Against a backdrop of the growing crisis in higher education, the economic fallout of the COVID-19 pandemic and a longer-term precaritisation of the youth and graduate labour market, the last 2 years have witnessed an increased visibility and promotion of flexible, entrepreneurial and often digitally mediated forms of self-employment addressed at young women, including the ‘side hustle’. With media declarations such as ‘the university side hustle has come of age’, universities themselves have begun embedding initiatives that seemingly help students launch a ‘student side hustle’ as they turn passions into entrepreneurial projects. The student side hustle has been advocated as a feasible way of not only supplementing income while studying but also investing in one’s future employability in the context of increasingly uncertain graduate outcomes. In this article we connect the emergence of the student side hustle to a broader postfeminist landscape in which (young) women are invited to engage in entrepreneurial self-employment through the promise of ‘passionate work’, financial autonomy and time-freedom. We demonstrate that in the context of higher education, where women outnumber men and dominate the degree subjects increasingly badged as ‘low value’ due to declining graduate outcomes, institutional incitements to engage in the student side hustle are distinctly gendered. Crucially, we contend that this framing and promotion of the student side hustle – in which women become the ‘poster girls’ of entrepreneurialism – works to facilitate and sustain the myths and ideals of postfeminist success while masking the ongoing crises and gendered inequalities that underpin contemporary higher education and the graduate labour market.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.50
自引率
4.20%
发文量
69
期刊介绍: European Journal of Cultural Studies is a major international, peer-reviewed journal founded in Europe and edited from Finland, the Netherlands, the UK, the United States and New Zealand. The journal promotes a conception of cultural studies rooted in lived experience. It adopts a broad-ranging view of cultural studies, charting new questions and new research, and mapping the transformation of cultural studies in the years to come. The journal publishes well theorized empirically grounded work from a variety of locations and disciplinary backgrounds. It engages in critical discussions on power relations concerning gender, class, sexual preference, ethnicity and other macro or micro sites of political struggle.
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