Dear DAVID,
The Graduate Student Council
(GSC) of the APA is now accepting abstracts for a panel
discussion on navigating academic philosophy as a
first-generation and/or low-income graduate student at the
Eastern Division.
Outsiders Within: Reflections on Being a
Low-Income and/or First-Generation Philosopher
Many philosophers have
highlighted the lack of diversity amongst professional
philosophers, and there are several active initiatives aimed at
encouraging greater diversity, a great portion of which are aimed
at supporting diverse undergraduates students on their route to
graduate study. One dimension of diversity that often gets
overlooked in these efforts—and which overlaps and intersects
with other axes of oppression in important ways—is working-class,
low-income, and first-generation status. This session aims to
provide voice to the experiences of philosophers who come from
poverty, identify as low-income, or are a first-generation
university student.
Abstracts
addressing the following questions are of particular interest: How do philosophers who are the first in their
families to attend university learn to navigate the academic
lifestyle? Does impostor syndrome ever go away, or at least get
better? How do low-income and first-generation philosophers deal
with the sense of double-alienation, both in academic spaces and
when they return to their families or first homes? How does class
intersect with other underrepresented identities to further
marginalize certain philosophers in the field? Have class and socioeconomic
status been adequately theorized by philosophers? Are low-income
and/or first-generation students encouraged to pursue philosophy
(by their families? Mentors? Professors?) and adequately
supported if they decide to do so? What unique challenges arise
for graduate students from low-income and/or first-generation
backgrounds?
This session seeks to explore
some of these questions and others, and to provide a space for
discussion and community building among those philosophers who
have experienced socioeconomic disadvantage along their route to
graduate study and/or professional philosophy.
Topics of discussion may
include (but are not limited to) the following:
- Alienation
- Stereotype Threat
- Impostor Syndrome
- Overcoming
Stereotypes
- Returning Home
and Cultural Code Switching
- Researching
SES/Class
- Intersectionality
& Class Struggle
- Deciding to
Pursue Philosophy While Poor
- Class Bias
- Race & Class,
Gender & Class, Sexual Orientation & Class
- The Intersection
of Immigration Status and First-Generation Status and/or
Class Struggle
- Obstacles to
Pursuing Graduate Study
- Moving for
Graduate Study as a Low-Income Person
- Conferences as
Exclusionary for Low-Income People
- Navigating
Academia's Elitism as a Low-Income Person
- Learning the Norms
- Hidden
Curriculum, Social Expectations, and Navigating Academic
Spaces
- Mentoring
Low-Income/First-Generation Students
- Cultivating
Support Systems and Community Building
Submissions
Abstracts for talks of 15-20
minutes prepared for anonymous review should be sent to both
Arianna Falbo (arianna_falbo@brown.edu)
and Heather Stewart (hstewa27@uwo.ca). In the body of the
email, please include your name, institutional affiliation (if
any), position (if any), and contact information. Please attach
an anonymized abstract of up to 500 words describing the primary
focus of your presentation and what you hope for the audience to
take away from it. The
organizing committee hopes to select panel participants from
various stages of the procession, including graduate students,
post-docs, as well as junior and senior faculty.
Unfortunately, we are not able to offer any funding for selected
speakers.
Deadline for
Submissions: September 30, 2019
Selection of
Presenters: Early October
For more information about the
Graduate Student Council of the APA, please visit our
webpage.
Thank you,
Sahar Joakim
APA Graduate Student Council
Chair
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