Stigma and spoiled identities: rescripting career norms for precariously employed academic staff

Despite the fact that precarious modes of employment have become increasingly common in academic careers, studies have shown that precarious contracts are often hidden and masked within higher education structures. This has important implications for the identities of those on such contracts. Thi...

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Main Author: Robson, J
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis 2022
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author Robson, J
author_facet Robson, J
author_sort Robson, J
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description Despite the fact that precarious modes of employment have become increasingly common in academic careers, studies have shown that precarious contracts are often hidden and masked within higher education structures. This has important implications for the identities of those on such contracts. This paper uses Goffman’s work on stigma, ‘spoiled identities’, and identity management, and Archer’s concepts of morphostasis and morphogenesis as heuristic devices to examine the ways in which precariously employed academic staff experience their work and think about their identities. In doing so, the paper maps out the complex relationship between structure, agency, and identity in precarious academic careers and the ways in which participants reproduced embedded career norms and dominant career scripts through the process of masking the stigma of their precarity.
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spelling oxford-uuid:0742e78f-5369-4130-9f97-b553e751d39b2023-01-26T09:46:50ZStigma and spoiled identities: rescripting career norms for precariously employed academic staffJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:0742e78f-5369-4130-9f97-b553e751d39bEnglishSymplectic ElementsTaylor & Francis2022Robson, JDespite the fact that precarious modes of employment have become increasingly common in academic careers, studies have shown that precarious contracts are often hidden and masked within higher education structures. This has important implications for the identities of those on such contracts. This paper uses Goffman’s work on stigma, ‘spoiled identities’, and identity management, and Archer’s concepts of morphostasis and morphogenesis as heuristic devices to examine the ways in which precariously employed academic staff experience their work and think about their identities. In doing so, the paper maps out the complex relationship between structure, agency, and identity in precarious academic careers and the ways in which participants reproduced embedded career norms and dominant career scripts through the process of masking the stigma of their precarity.
spellingShingle Robson, J
Stigma and spoiled identities: rescripting career norms for precariously employed academic staff
title Stigma and spoiled identities: rescripting career norms for precariously employed academic staff
title_full Stigma and spoiled identities: rescripting career norms for precariously employed academic staff
title_fullStr Stigma and spoiled identities: rescripting career norms for precariously employed academic staff
title_full_unstemmed Stigma and spoiled identities: rescripting career norms for precariously employed academic staff
title_short Stigma and spoiled identities: rescripting career norms for precariously employed academic staff
title_sort stigma and spoiled identities rescripting career norms for precariously employed academic staff
work_keys_str_mv AT robsonj stigmaandspoiledidentitiesrescriptingcareernormsforprecariouslyemployedacademicstaff