tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21165575.post7095050229659934413..comments2024-03-10T20:46:19.274-04:00Comments on In the Middle: Privilege, tenure, adjunctification and the decimated job marketCord J. Whitakerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06224143153295429986noreply@blogger.comBlogger6125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21165575.post-37295385454415152382014-01-03T13:16:06.829-05:002014-01-03T13:16:06.829-05:00Michael Bérubé weighs in on why the MLA gets blame...<a href="https://www.facebook.com/michael.berube.169/posts/433480786778455" rel="nofollow">Michael Bérubé weighs in</a> on why the MLA gets blamed so much during these discussions of the US academic job market, and how that blame misses some important realities.Jeffrey Cohenhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17346504393740520542noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21165575.post-49303555884092610652014-01-02T08:54:50.051-05:002014-01-02T08:54:50.051-05:00And this, from Timothy Burke :
But it is happenin...And this, <a href="http://blogs.swarthmore.edu/burke/blog/2014/01/01/unplanned-obsolescence/" rel="nofollow">from Timothy Burke </a>:<br /><br />But it is happening to more than academia. It is happening to law. It is happening to psychiatry. It is happening to accounting. It is happening to medicine. It is happening to anything and everything that organized itself as a profession, that licensed people with special training as the only legal or proper source of valued services. Some of the work of the professions is being automated. Some of it is being crowdsourced. Some of it is being simply deemed too expensive or unnecessary. And some of it is being taken out of the hands of the professionals and hitched to the wagon of a new class of owners who turn professionals into workers, who demolish the idea that the defining value of professional service is the knowledgeable autonomy of trained experts within their own institutions and in their own practices of service.<br /><br />So in this sense to say that tenured faculty are to academic labor as white people are to racism is both to think too small and to misfire the structural analogy. Too small because the same thing could and should be said of all professionals whose terms of employment today are still set within the economies and norms that existed in the mid-20th Century, who still can largely believe in and defend the habitus of their profession as it once existed. Which means, equally, that contingent faculty banging on the closed door have many potential allies across a wide range of professions–but to make common cause with them still requires some of the choices I outlined earlier. Namely, were the professions as they once existed a good thing in those former terms? Or do we want to tear down their remaining shreds and fragments in order to make something radically new?Jeffrey Cohenhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17346504393740520542noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21165575.post-88334266253951293422014-01-02T07:18:21.335-05:002014-01-02T07:18:21.335-05:00Also, this piece by Chuck Ryback. It's most di...Also, this piece by Chuck Ryback. It's most directly relevant to public institutions but makes some good points: http://www.sadiron.com/waving-the-white-flag-on-tenured-vs-adjunct/<br /><br />"Now, we can pretend otherwise and I can’t make people think any differently, but it’s worth noting that the “tenured people are the problem!” narrative is essentially a right-wing argument that we are now replicating internally. This is problematic and chilling...I’ll say this plainly—the solutions are almost entirely legislative, and thus the road is long, painstaking, and discouraging (see small issues like: gerrymandering and the influence of wealth in American politics). If your response to this point is “Yeah but, those damned tenured professors!” then welcome to the right-wing rhetoric of scapegoating and distraction .... It is vital that we understand the financial structures of the campus and systems in which we work. I’ve made the following point many times, so I’ll try again—you could fire every tenured and tenure-track person on my campus and adjunct working conditions would not improve one bit. They would be exacerbated. “Yeah but…more money would be available.” No, it wouldn’t. For example, in my university system, the pool of money used to pay full-time faculty and staff is completely separate from the money used to pay adjuncts (and this is deliberate). Remember: “contingent” in higher ed is also a financial designation with important budgetary implications."<br /><br /><a href="http://www.sadiron.com/waving-the-white-flag-on-tenured-vs-adjunct/" rel="nofollow">Read the whole thing.</a>Jeffrey Cohenhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17346504393740520542noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21165575.post-78881478693351967402014-01-01T16:36:53.186-05:002014-01-01T16:36:53.186-05:00@Jeffrey: Thanks so much for migrating the FB disc...@Jeffrey: Thanks so much for migrating the FB discussion over here, and Adeline Koh's FB discussion is excellent too. <br /><br />Note the original blogger has responded to the "racism-metaphor" discussion in ways that you might appreciate: <br /><br />http://theprofessorisin.com/2014/01/01/the-problem-with-my-analogy/<br /><br />I will state, agreeing with @Eileen, that what's still missing from this discussion is not only "recognizing privilege" but a real sense of SOLIDARITY and ACTION to transform these conditions. We are all in this TOGETHER -- it's not just a privileged TT few who must "acknowledge their privilege" and that's it -- its about changing the profession (hate that word) so all kinds of people can thrive within and beyond it.Jonathan Hsyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13214201468052661183noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21165575.post-19535765844991482812014-01-01T14:14:02.087-05:002014-01-01T14:14:02.087-05:00It's very simple: a mass walkout. All tenured ...It's very simple: a mass walkout. All tenured and tenure-track faculty refuse to teach until the labor inequities are addressed. No progress is possible unless people are willing to actually risk something to effect change, and it has to be those with something to lose; hence, also, something to wield. There is no university without teachers. So everyone stop teaching. And don't say that just hurts the students because that is a copout.Eileen Joyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13756965845120441308noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21165575.post-81258554548346447892014-01-01T11:59:50.827-05:002014-01-01T11:59:50.827-05:00Since this FB post by Adeline Koh is also public, ...<a href="https://www.facebook.com/adeline.koh.90/posts/10151816657922117" rel="nofollow">Since this FB post by Adeline Koh is also public</a>, read it and find in its copious comments many, many more eloquent elaborations of the point I tried to make about Kelsky's blog post.Jeffrey Cohenhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17346504393740520542noreply@blogger.com