Should academia require endurance or empathy?
After meeting a friend and discussing the highs and lows of
PhD life and academia recently, I then went to see the Enduring Eye exhibition
at the National Library of Scotland, Edinburgh. The exhibition is a stunning
display of photographs of Sir Ernest Shackleton's
'Endurance Expedition' of 1914-1917.
Being in academia right now kind of feels like being trapped
in an iced-in ship, that is, in a hostile environment not suited to human
beings. By no means do I intend to underplay the harsh experiences faced by the
crew of the Endurance. But neither should we underestimate the mental and
physical levy that is currently the “norm” of academia.
Here is the optimistic part of my post, working conditions
are what we decide to make them. As we move into post-Brexit times it has never
been more important to create good working conditions… at the forefront of this emphasis should be our universities, which are supposed to be focused on
education and research, In other words, on people and their (our) striving
towards better things…
The PhD process, post-doctorate and academic life is fraught
with many dangers. I, amongst others, have not been immune to this. I will not
share friend's stories, but I will share a bit of mine, in that I suffered both
mentally and physically in order to write journal articles, a thesis, do
part-time work, look after undergraduates, write grant proposals, and get
fellowships and funding. When the stress affected my health and I realised the
harsh consequences of this, I made a conscious decision to be the change I
wanted to see. I am not perfect, can anyone say that? I was inspired by people
I observed in my department. The staff that took the extra time not
just to give you feedback in a constructive way but also checked on how you were
doing. The fellow academics that shared not just their stories of success—the
performing social media persona I have come to loathe—also their stories of
difficulty and perserverance.
The question we need to ask is what should our real
perserverance be towards?
The above quote, and the one following, could be used to
describe the life of a time-stressed academic working away at their desk...
Here comes the core of my article, what kind of place do we want to live and work in? If I
suggest small changes like resisting the journal writing, the high performing
wire of the 'career path', what are your first thoughts and feelings? Perhaps ones of horror…
how on earth can I complete with Charlie,
Amir and Samantha, without publishing one book and several hundred academic
papers?
Honestly, you might not be able to. Academic skills can
however be used out of the workplace, and surely that is better for mental and
physical health than an academic burn out? I am probably not being controversial enough... It’s going to be hard for those that
stick around in academia. Those that somehow survive year by year postdoctorate
contracts are lucky. I have decided not to follow this route, because shock horror I am
not an upper class individual and I need to cover my rent, food and heating.
That academia is for the rich and the prividledged is nothing new. So here I (we?)
are striking out on an alternative path.
Somehow I doubt we will end up frozen to the rocky tundra.
The happy news is that Shackleton’s crew made
it. Remarkably every one survived. My thoughts lately have been circling around
that, survival alone is not enough, there is a certain quality of life I want
and a lot of that does not revolve around money but less stress. The time to
potter around in my garden without the stress of rewriting an academic article
that might never be published all because I am told my work is not judged on its benefit to others but the number of journal articles that are accepted. Grrr!
As a sociologist it was natural that I interpret the
Enduring Eye exhibition through my own reflexivity. I have not said anything
new, just added one more voice to a growing number of articles recently. That academia pushes out
the underprividledged, that working conditions are unsustainable in the long
term, and that we demand better. Thoughts about a better world can be
inspired by art, taken on a trip that no one thought possible until someone
crossed the Antarctic. The reality is that we all play a part to make it
possible. So what will your part be?
Rather than list solutions, because different individuals and different workplaces have different needs, I would like to ask you to take some time to reflect and share in the comments what you can do for yourself, to take care of yourself at work, and what you can do for others. Two little things... and hopefully this might help others who are stuck.
Mine are:-
1. For others I will try to express compassion, even when difficult.
2. For myself I will complete pieces of work in my own time, to allow time for creativity and time to live in the moment.
I wish you luck on your journey.
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