Inhabiting the in-between: walls, bridges and interstices in our feminist academic practice
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteEditorial
Taylor & Francis
Date
2024-02-05Referencia bibliográfica
Published version: Carmen Gregorio Gil, Ana Alcázar-Campos & Lorena Valenzuela-Vela (2024) Inhabiting the in-between: walls, bridges and interstices in our feminist academic practice, Gender and Education, DOI: 10.1080/09540253.2024.2325401
Patrocinador
University of GranadaRésumé
In this text, with an autobiographical methodology[Q3] [Del Valle, Teresa. 1995. “Metodología Para la Elaboración de la
Autobiografía.” In Actas del Seminario Internacional Género y Trayectoria del Profesorado Universitario, edited by Sanz Rueda,
281–289. Madrid: Instituto de Investigaciones Feministas/Universidad Complutense; Gregorio Gil, Carmen. 2023b. “Teresa del Valle Murga, maestra y mentora: precursora de la antropología feminista en el Estado español.” In Maestras de la
antropología en España: una aproximación a través del relato de vida, edited by María Jesús, Pena Castro, Elena Hernández
Corrochano, and Anastasia Téllez Infantes, 153–170; Okely, Judith. 1992. “Anthropology and Autobiography: Participatory
Experience and Embodied Knowledge.” InAnthropology & Autobiography, edited by Judith Okely, and Callaway Hellen, 1–
28. London: Routledge], we consider what it has meant for us to position ourselves as feminists in academia, inhabiting
research lines and spaces in the field of Gender Studies. In our context, where[Q4] universities are divided into teaching
departments based on areas of knowledge, placing ourselves in a peripheral, subordinate field such as that which is termed
Gender and/or Feminist Studies, as well as involving a dual task, this has positioned us at times as ‘traitors’ to our fields of
knowledge. In this paper, we aim to go beyond analyses demonstrating the subordinate place women occupy in universities
[Acker, Sandra, and Anne, Wagner. 2019. “Feminist Scholars Working Around the Neoliberal University.”Gender and
Education 31 (1): 62–81. https://do.org/10.1080/09540253.2017.1296117; Angervall, Petra and Beach, Denis. 2020. “Dividing
Academic Work: gender and academic Career at Swedish Universities”. Gender and Education, 32(3), 347–362,
https://do.org/10.1080/09540253.2017.1401047; Aiston, Sarah, and Chee Kent. 2021. “The Silence/ing of Academic Women.”
Gender and Education 33 (2): 138–155. https://do.org/10.1080/09540253.2020.1716955] to explore how, although situating
ourselves in this in-between place resulted in a dual task and has been a source of conflict, it has also been a space of
escape (from the hierarchies which are the backbone of departments) and of oxygen (by enabling dialogue between
knowledge and disciplines from our ethnographic perspective).