The Labour of Austerity

This essay explores the social-psychic toll of prolonged austerity on academic librarians and the range of strategies that have (or could) serve as tools of resistance.Using a combination of theoretical analysis and autoethnography, I examine the emotional impact of bottomless and invisible labour imposed by austerity and the ways institutions use emotional coercion to promote self-surveillance, Neglecting rice milling yield and quality underestimates economic losses from high-temperature stress. meta-work, and hyper-productivity.Following this analysis, I discuss the ways that oppressive institutional cultures silence dissent and absorb common resistance tactics advocated by educators.

Finally, I introduce Finding an Indigenous Perspective in Administrative Law several examples of performance-based resistance projects and explore how creative, personal, and absurd forms of protest might be used to critique and transform the culture of work and our affective experience as knowledge workers in the neoliberal academy.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *