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Tortoise's avatar

Gah. Thank you for guest posting here. My partner was an adjunct for 15 years; helped start a union here. I was an adjunct and 'visiting asst professor' for seven years before getting a tenure-track job (where, indeed, none of that experience translated into anything except me being expected to do more work than the typical new tenure-track asst prof). Between my experiences and my partner's, it's fair to say that I am not surprised by your colleagues' public failure to react, act, respond. One of the many problems with this multi-tiered inequality masquerading as a meritocracy is that tenure-track profs get pitted against every other professor, whether they realize or not. TT profs are 'lucky,' or 'talented,' or 'deserving, and administrations enjoy these false conclusions because they enable TT profs to fail to support, advocate for, or agitate for the mass of adjuncts and precariously employed professors while benefiting from their labor. Such a broken, defiled system.

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<Mary L. Tabor>'s avatar

Despairingly honest--what a loss for your university. I'm wondering if the arts have lost their place in the university setting--unless it's the Yale Drama School for theatre? Where literature and English departments are concerned, John Guillory's new book _Professing Criticism_ published by the U of Chicago and covered in The New Yorker and The New York Times startles. Here's a link to The New Yorker piece: https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2023/01/23/has-academia-ruined-literary-criticism-professing-criticism-john-guillory -- admittedly, I haven't read the book. Note that he's now retired.

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