TY - JOUR
T1 - Writing multi‐vocal intersectionality in times of crisis
AU - Einola, Katja
AU - Elkina, Anna
AU - Gao, Grace
AU - Hambleton, Jennifer
AU - Kassila-Pakanen, Anna-Liisa
AU - Mandalaki, Emmanouela
AU - Zhang, Ling Eleanor
AU - Pullen, Alison
PY - 2021/7/1
Y1 - 2021/7/1
N2 - This article is a multi‐vocal account, a form of writing differently, which captures our changing lives and livelihoods under the present global health crisis. Through the process of writing, we create a safe space to understand how the COVID‐19 pandemic exposes our gendered, intersectional lives. Our writing gives voice to suppressed thoughts and embodied affects as they surface in relation to entrenched structural inequalities where we witness the marginalization of intersectional difference, in our case women, the feminine, and race in academia and neoliberal society. By rendering visible the structural inequalities that have become amplified during the pandemic, and the ways in which these inequalities have affected our everyday lives, we are able to give witness to intersectional differences. Our multi‐vocal embodied text is offered as an emancipatory, affective mobilization of our lives, encompassing feelings of grief, loss, fear, anger, frustration, and vulnerability. This collective piece of writing gives rise to solidarity in a crisis‐stricken world where we choose to live with hope.
AB - This article is a multi‐vocal account, a form of writing differently, which captures our changing lives and livelihoods under the present global health crisis. Through the process of writing, we create a safe space to understand how the COVID‐19 pandemic exposes our gendered, intersectional lives. Our writing gives voice to suppressed thoughts and embodied affects as they surface in relation to entrenched structural inequalities where we witness the marginalization of intersectional difference, in our case women, the feminine, and race in academia and neoliberal society. By rendering visible the structural inequalities that have become amplified during the pandemic, and the ways in which these inequalities have affected our everyday lives, we are able to give witness to intersectional differences. Our multi‐vocal embodied text is offered as an emancipatory, affective mobilization of our lives, encompassing feelings of grief, loss, fear, anger, frustration, and vulnerability. This collective piece of writing gives rise to solidarity in a crisis‐stricken world where we choose to live with hope.
KW - academia
KW - inequality
KW - intersectionality
KW - racism
KW - writing
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85096864449&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/gwao.12577
DO - 10.1111/gwao.12577
M3 - Article
SN - 0968-6673
VL - 28
SP - 1600
EP - 1623
JO - Gender, Work and Organization
JF - Gender, Work and Organization
IS - 4
ER -