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Original Articles

On Authoritarian Neoliberalism and Poetic Epistemology

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ABSTRACT

As one response to the secular crisis of capitalism, higher education is being proletarianised. Its academics and students are shorn of autonomy beyond the sale of their labour-power. One heuristic for analysing this response is authoritarian neoliberalism, imposed as a means of enacting disciplinary practices in the name of the market with an anti-democratic rationale. This has a distinctly technocratic focus, rooted in techniques of performativity, including audits and assessments of teaching, research and scholarship, grounded in productivity, the management of time and value-creation. However, there are a range of intersectional and geographical responses to such an imposition, through which it is possible to describe alternatives to these architectures of subsumption. In particular, a second heuristic emerges which challenges the restructuring of the University in the Global North, erupting from struggles for decolonisation. Here, Audre Lorde’s invocation to an integrated, poetic existence that situates bodies in places, and respects feelings and emotions as the site of epistemological development and understanding, underpins the possibility for dismantling hegemonic knowledge production. The article examines whether humanist narratives of solidarity, in particular from marginalised voices, might help academics and students to analyse their alienated labour and to imagine that another world is possible.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Richard Hall

Richard Hall is Professor of Education and Technology at De Montfort University, and a National Teaching Fellow. He is a trustee of the Open Library of Humanities, and a member of the Management Committee of the Leicester Primary Pupil Referral Unit. His most recent monograph is The Alienated Academic: The Struggle for Autonomy Inside the University with Palgrave Macmillan. He writes about life in academia at richard-hall.org

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