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A landmark volume documenting the scope and insidiousness of gendered abuse in academia, revealing the limits of institutional redress, and sharing hard-won strategies for change.
Broken Record brings together narratives of gendered abuse in academia from across disciplines, at every career stage, around the United States and the world. Individually and collectively, contributors describe harrowing experiences of bullying, mobbing, harassment, and assault in a range of institutional spaces, including classrooms, offices, library stacks, conferences, interviews, and out on field research. Their abusers are teachers, mentors, students, colleagues, chairs, administrators, and even representatives of the very offices tasked with protecting them. Beyond using storytelling to expose the ubiquity of abuse, these writers also theorize its causes and proffer strategies for resistance and healing. With an afterword by Sara Ahmed, author of the groundbreaking Complaint!, Broken Record forms its own powerful collective-a chorus of nearly fifty academics with highly varied yet strikingly consistent narratives, united in a clarion call for change.
Mary K. Holland is Professor of English at SUNY New Paltz. She is the author of The Moral Worlds of Contemporary Realism and coeditor, with Heather Hewett, of #MeToo and Literary Studies: Reading, Writing, and Teaching about Sexual Violence and Rape Culture. Carrie Rohman is Professor of English at Lafayette College. She is the author of Choreographies of the Living: Bioaesthetics in Literature, Art, and Performance and Stalking the Subject: Modernism and the Animal. Carlyn Ena Ferrari is Assistant Professor of English at Seattle University. She is the author of Do Not Separate Her from Her Garden: Anne Spencer's Ecopoetics.
Introduction: "A Fragile Archive"Mary K. Holland, Carrie Rohman, and Carlyn Ena Ferrari
Part One: Contexts and Systems of Abuse
1. Survival Analysis: Why Do We Vanish, Where Do We Go?Anonymous
2. This Chapter Not Intentionally Left BlankAnonymous
3. Unbecoming the Other Me: A Female Academic Trapped in the Male Student GazeAimee Parkison
4. Keeping Women in Their Place: Sexism in Religious UniversitiesRachel Noorda
5. The Snake: Surviving Misogyny in TunisiaSouhir Zekri Masson
6. Tall Poppy in the English Field: How Successful Women Are Mowed DownAnonymous
7. Misogyny and Abuse in the Academic Library Workplace: Reflections on Fifteen Years in American Academic LibrariesCarolyn Carpan
8. "Tell Me More": When Bleeding on the Page Isn't EnoughCarlyn Ena Ferrari
Part Two: Resistance and Consequences
9. Mad Woman in the Ivory Tower: The Continuous Costs of Speaking Up after Professor/Student AbuseSarah Cheshire
10. Muffled Voices: Creating Safe Space in a Toxic DepartmentRifat Siddiqui
11. Rocking the Boat: Experiences of "Silencing" from the Global SouthDarlene Demandante and Raphaella Elaine Miranda
12. To Make a Fuss: The Chronic Predator in Higher EducationAnonymous
13. Too Woke, Too Radical, Too Unforgiving: Queer Resistance to the Patriarchal PanopticonNancy Pathak
14. Shocked: Resisting and Rising above Abuse in Academe(Karen) Irene Countryman-Roswurm
15. The Specter of Anonymity and the Shadow Labor of ComplaintAlison E. Vogelaar
Part Three: Theorizing and Enacting Change as Individuals and Collectives
16. All My Skinfolk Ain't Kinfolk: The Politics of Solidarity in Black AcademiaNicole Carr
17. In Defense of RememberingShannon Walsh
18. How Black Men Can Help Eradicate Gendered Abuse on University CampusesKudzaiishe Peter Vanyoro
19. Tracking Sexual Predators across Academic Institutions: Benefits and Limits of Informal Complaints and Recommendations for ChangeAnonymous
20. The LIEG's Complaint Collective: Reclaiming Academic VoicesLidia M. V. Possas and M. Emilia Barbosa
21. Disrupting the Past as Prologue: Recognizing and Responding to Strategies and Tactics of Gendered OppressionChristina Gallup, Anne Hinderliter, Njoki M. Kamau, Arshia Khan, Lu Smith, and Elizabethada Wright
22. Feminist Secretaries: Silence, Authenticity, and Resistance in the AcademyFrancine Banner, Pamela Aronson, Kathleen Darcy, Maureen Linker, Jean-Carlos Lopez, and Lisa A. Martin
23. It Is Better to Speak: A Complaint CollectiveLori Wright, Neisha Ginae Wiley, Elizabeth VanWassenhove, Brandelyn Tosolt, Rae Loftis, and Meg L. Hensley
Afterword: "Heard as a Broken Record"Sara Ahmed
AcknowledgmentsNotes on ContributorsIndex
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