Global Feminist Autoethnographies bears witness to our
displacements, disruptions, and distress as tenured faculty,
faculty on temporary contracts, graduate students, and people
connected to academia during COVID-19. The authors document their
experiences arising within academia and beyond it, gathering
narratives from across the globe—Australia, Canada, Ghana,
Finland, India, Norway, South Africa, the United Kingdom, the
United States along with transnational engagements with Bolivia,
Iran, Nepal, and Taiwan. In an era where the older rules about work
and family related to our survival, wellbeing, and dignity are
rapidly being transformed, this book shows that distress and
traumas are emerging and deepening across the divides within and
between the global North and South, depending on the intersecting
structures that have affected each of us. It documents our distress
and trauma and how we have worked to lift each other up amidst
severe precarities. A global co-written project, this book shows
how we are moving to decolonize our scholarship. It will be of
interest to an interdisciplinary array of scholars in the areas of
intersectionality, gender, family, race, sexuality, migration, and
global and transnational sociology.
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