ABSTRACT

This text brings together writing and research on feminist experience in academia. It covers issues such as provision of care, maternalism in the academy and dynamics of interaction between women in higher eduction. There are challenging and provocative analyses of many questions: how large is the gap between rhetoric and reality in HE institutions? how do institutions behave towards disabled staff? how far is stereotyping still affecting the roles which women play in academia? what do women face when they combine motherhood with teaching or studying? coping mechanisms and survival tactics are brought under scrutiny, and the effect these have on the behaviour of female academics and their interactions with the institution of each other. This text should provide insight and evidence for researchers to further develop their own theories, and also many starting points for those wishing to undertake their own research. Written in collaboration with the Women in Higher Education Network.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

Danusia Malina and Sian Maslin-Prothero

part |1 pages

Section 1 Power: Challenging Care in Higher Education

chapter 1|10 pages

Women in Higher Education: The Gap between Corporate Rhetoric and the Reality of Experience

Pamela Cotterill and Ruth L. Waterhouse

chapter 4|13 pages

Women, Social Work and Academia

Lena Dominelli

part |1 pages

Section 2 Maternalism in the Academy

chapter 5|13 pages

Mixing Motherhood and Academia -A Lethal Cocktail

Carol Munn-Giddings

chapter 6|9 pages

‘All in a Day’s Work’: Gendered Care Work in Higher Education

Tina Barnes-Powell and Gayle Letherby

chapter |11 pages

Incorporation or Alienation?

Robyn Thomas

part |1 pages

Section 3 Collective Action: Standing Still or Moving Forward?

chapter 9|10 pages

Creating Space: The Development of a Feminist Research Group

Avril Butler

chapter 13|10 pages

Coming Clean: On Being Feminist Editors

Danusia Malina and Sian Maslin-Prothero

chapter |5 pages

Notes on Contributors