TY - JOUR
T1 - Viewpoint : visibilising care in the academy : (re)performing academic mothering in the transformative moment of COVID-19
AU - Gilbert, Emilee
AU - Pascoe-Leahy, Carla
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
PY - 2023/3
Y1 - 2023/3
N2 - The effects of COVID-19 have been profoundly felt across higher education as across broader society. In particular, the pandemic has revealed that many of our most stubbornly entrenched inequalities do not simply follow gendered fault lines, but rather care fault lines. In this article, we adopt a maternal epistemology and collaborative witnessing to outline the disruption that academic mothers have experienced during the pandemic. However, we argue that this disruption is not simply obstructive to academic mothers and other caregivers. Rather, COVID-19 has provided a potentially transformative moment for the visibility and normalisation of care in the academy. It has forced the complex negotiation of paid work and care work that academic mothers must constantly manage into the spotlight. The pandemic has provoked an opportunity for a different performance of mothering in the academy; one that does not require us to invisibilise our care to be valued. This (re)performance and revaluation has the potential to reform the cultural landscapes of the academy, towards spaces in which care is reimagined as not simply an encumberment but also an enrichment.
AB - The effects of COVID-19 have been profoundly felt across higher education as across broader society. In particular, the pandemic has revealed that many of our most stubbornly entrenched inequalities do not simply follow gendered fault lines, but rather care fault lines. In this article, we adopt a maternal epistemology and collaborative witnessing to outline the disruption that academic mothers have experienced during the pandemic. However, we argue that this disruption is not simply obstructive to academic mothers and other caregivers. Rather, COVID-19 has provided a potentially transformative moment for the visibility and normalisation of care in the academy. It has forced the complex negotiation of paid work and care work that academic mothers must constantly manage into the spotlight. The pandemic has provoked an opportunity for a different performance of mothering in the academy; one that does not require us to invisibilise our care to be valued. This (re)performance and revaluation has the potential to reform the cultural landscapes of the academy, towards spaces in which care is reimagined as not simply an encumberment but also an enrichment.
UR - https://hdl.handle.net/1959.7/uws:69424
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85140072037&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/1468-0424.12659
DO - 10.1111/1468-0424.12659
M3 - Article
SN - 0953-5233
VL - 35
SP - 340
EP - 361
JO - Gender and History
JF - Gender and History
IS - 1
ER -