This book outlines the creative responses academics are using to subvert
powerful market forces that restrict university work to a neoliberal,
economic focus. The second volume in a diptych of critical academic work
on the changing landscape of neoliberal universities, the editors and
contributors examine how academics 'prise open the cracks' in neoliberal
logic to find space for resistance, collegiality, democracy and hope.
Adopting a distinctly postcolonial positioning, the volume interrogates
the link between neoliberalism and the ongoing privileging of
Euro-American theorising in universities. The contributors move from
accounts of unmitigated managerialism and toxic workplaces, to the need
to decolonise the academy to, finally, illustrating the various creative
and counter-hegemonic practices academics use to resist, subvert and
reinscribe dominant neoliberal discourses. This hopeful volume will
appeal to students and scholars interested in the role of universities
in advancing cultural democracy, as well as university staff, academics
and students.