欢迎来到批判人文主义和激进主义奖学金之家

hephzibah v. strmic-pawl
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引用次数: 0

摘要

作为一个20多岁的年轻人,我从来没有想过我会成为一名“社会学家”,不管社会学家在学术界是怎么定义的。然而,到了26岁的时候,我发现自己在攻读博士学位,并致力于研究生学习,同时参与了几个社会正义运动。我与本科生、其他研究生和社区成员一起开展了一系列活动和项目,比如要求校园性侵犯问题更加透明,反对弗吉尼亚州宪法婚姻修正案,该修正案称婚姻“只是一男一女之间的结合”,组织了一门专门介绍酷儿理论的课程,并为LGBTQ中心申请更多资源,创建了一个非营利组织,帮助社区大学生转学到四年制大学,并发起了创建埃拉·贝克日的活动。不用说,老师们知道我还参与了许多他们认为“社会学之外”的活动。因此,不同的人以不同的方式告诉我,我必须放弃这种激进主义,“更认真”地对待我的研究生学业,尽管我的成绩非常好,而且我达到了系里的每一个标准。临近毕业时,我发现自己喜欢教书,学生们对我的教学反应积极,于是我申请了教授职位。但当学术就业市场的现实开始稳定下来时,一位教授告诉我,我应该放弃成为一名教授的目标,因为我太激进了,永远不会适应。虽然我认为这位教授的意思是她觉得不得不说的“残酷的事实”,但对我来说却毫无意义。在我看来,一门旨在研究社会问题并提供变革途径的学科怎么会不欢迎一个自认为是激进分子的人呢?
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Welcome to Your Home for Critical Humanist, Activist Scholarship
As a young 20-something, I never dreamt I would be a “sociologist,” however sociologist might be defined in academia. Yet by the age of 26, I found myself in a PhD program and dedicated to graduate studies and, at the same time, involved with several social justice movements. I worked with undergraduates, other graduate students, and community members on a range of campaigns and programming such as demanding more transparency on issues of sexual assault on campus, fighting Virginia’s state constitutional marriage amendment that said marriage was “only a union between one man and one woman,”, organizing a course dedicated to queer theory and requesting more resources for the LGBTQ center, creating a non-profit to help community college students transfer to a 4-year college, and initiating the campaign to create an Ella Baker Day. Needless to say, faculty knew that I was involved in many other activities that they considered “outside” of sociology. Thus, I was told in various ways by various people that I had to forgo the activism and “be more serious” with my graduate studies, even though my grades were stellar, and I reached every department benchmark. As I neared graduation, I learned that I loved to teach and that students responded positively to my teaching, so I applied for professor positions. But when the reality of the academic job market started settling in, one professor told me that I should give up on the goal of being a professor as I was too much of an activist and would never fit in. While I think this professor meant this advice as a “harsh truth” that she felt compelled to say, it made no sense to me. How was it that a discipline that I saw as designed to study social problems and provide for pathways of change would not welcome someone who also considered herself an activist?
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