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‘I love my work but I hate my job’—Early career academic perspective on academic times in Australia

There has been significant interest of late into how academics spend their time during both their working and personal lives. Inspired by research around academic lives, this paper explores the narratives of 25 early career academics in Australian institutions across the country. Like several others...

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Published in:Time & society 2019-05, Vol.28 (2), p.743-762
Main Authors: Osbaldiston, Nick, Cannizzo, Fabian, Mauri, Christian
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Language:English
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description There has been significant interest of late into how academics spend their time during both their working and personal lives. Inspired by research around academic lives, this paper explores the narratives of 25 early career academics in Australian institutions across the country. Like several others, we propose that one of the fundamental aspects of time in academia is that of labour spent doing formal, instrumental and bureaucratic tasks. This impinges on the other side of academic life, the writing, research and discovery that bring subjective value to the academic. Using a Weberian framework however, we argue that there are two distinct rationalisations of these ‘times’ occurring. One is the formal, instrumentally imposed rationalisation of the university itself and the second is a more personally defined subjective rationalisation of research and writing. In terms of the latter, we argue that younger academics are not only seeing these times as important for their sense of self in the present but also for their projected vision of what they will become later in their professional career.
doi_str_mv 10.1177/0961463X16682516
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source International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS); Sage Journals Online; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Academic staff
Bureaucracy
Careers
Discovery
Love
Personal information
Scholarship
title ‘I love my work but I hate my job’—Early career academic perspective on academic times in Australia
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