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Presumed Incompetent II: Race, Class, Power, and Resistance of Women in Academia
Presumed Incompetent II: Race, Class, Power, and Resistance of Women in Academia
Presumed Incompetent II: Race, Class, Power, and Resistance of Women in Academia
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Presumed Incompetent II: Race, Class, Power, and Resistance of Women in Academia

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The courageous and inspiring personal narratives and empirical studies in Presumed Incompetent II: Race, Class, Power, and Resistance of Women in Academia name formidable obstacles and systemic biases that all women faculty—from diverse intersectional and transnational identities and from tenure track, terminal contract, and administrative positions—encounter in their higher education careers. They provide practical, specific, and insightful guidance to fight back, prevail, and thrive in challenging work environments. This new volume comes at a crucial historical moment as the United States grapples with a resurgence of white supremacy and misogyny at the forefront of our social and political dialogues that continue to permeate the academic world.

Contributors: Marcia Allen Owens, Sarah Amira de la Garza, Sahar Aziz, Jacquelyn Bridgeman, Jamiella Brooks, Lolita Buckner Inniss, Kim Case, Donna Castaneda, Julia Chang, Meredith Clark, Meera Deo, Penelope Espinoza, Yvette Flores, Lynn Fujiwara, Jennifer Gomez, Angela Harris, Dorothy Hines, Rachelle Joplin, Jessica Lavariega Monforti, Cynthia Lee, Yessenia Manzo, Melissa Michelson, Susie E. Nam, Yolanda Flores Niemann, Jodi O’Brien, Amelia Ortega, Laura Padilla, Grace Park, Stacey Patton, Desdamona Rios, Melissa Michal Slocum, Nellie Tran, Rachel Tudor, Pamela Tywman Hoff, Adrien Wing, Jemimah Li Young

LanguageEnglish
Release dateApr 15, 2020
ISBN9781607329664
Presumed Incompetent II: Race, Class, Power, and Resistance of Women in Academia

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    Presumed Incompetent II - Yolanda Flores Niemann

    Presumed Incompetent II

    Race, Class, Power, and Resistance of Women in Academia

    Yolanda Flores Niemann, Gabriella Gutiérrez y Muhs, and Carmen G. González

    UTAH STATE UNIVERSITY PRESS

    Logan

    © 2020 by University Press of Colorado

    Published by Utah State University Press

    An imprint of University Press of Colorado

    245 Century Circle, Suite 202

    Louisville, Colorado 80027

    All rights reserved

    The University Press of Colorado is a proud member of the Association of University Presses.

    The University Press of Colorado is a cooperative publishing enterprise supported, in part, by Adams State University, Colorado State University, Fort Lewis College, Metropolitan State University of Denver, Regis University, University of Colorado, University of Northern Colorado, University of Wyoming, Utah State University, and Western Colorado University.

    IISBN: 978-1-60732-964-0 (hardcover)

    ISBN: 978-1-60732-965-7 (paperback)

    ISBN: 978-1-60732-966-4 (ebook)

    https://doi.org/10.7330/9781607329664

    Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication

    Data Names: Niemann, Yolanda Flores, editor. | Gutiérrez y Muhs, Gabriella, editor. | Gonzalez, Carmen G., 1962– editor.

    Title: Presumed incompetent II : race, class, power, and resistance of women in academia / Yolanda Flores Niemann, Gabriella Gutiérrez y Muhs, Carmen G. González.

    Description: Louisville : University Press of Colorado, [2020] | Includes bibliographical references and index.

    Identifiers: LCCN 2020001586 (print) | LCCN 2020001587 (ebook) | ISBN 9781607329640 (cloth) | ISBN 9781607329657 (paperback) | ISBN 9781607329664 (epub)

    Subjects: LCSH: Minority women college teachers—United States. | Minority women college teachers—Social conditions. | Sex discrimination in higher education—United States. | Racism in higher education—United States. | Women in higher education—United States. | Feminism and higher education—United States. | Women college teachers—United States. | Minority college teachers—United States.

    Classification: LCC LB2332.32 .P74 2020 (print) | LCC LB2332.32 (ebook) | DDC 378.1/2082—dc23

    LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2020001586

    LC ebook record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2020001587

    Cover illustration, Sapiencia, Seshat, Anansi: Encountering Wisdom, Guidance, and Trust, by Veronica Eldredge

    Contents

    Foreword: Presumed Incompetent in the Era of Diversity

    Angela P. Harris

    Acknowledgments

    Introduction

    Yolanda Flores Niemann, Gabriella Gutiérrez y Muhs, and Carmen G. González

    Section 1: Tenure and Promotion

    1. Still I Rise

    Jacquelyn Bridgeman

    2. The Lucky Law Professor and the Eucatastrophic Moment

    Lolita Buckner Inniss

    3. Tenure with a Termination Letter

    Penelope Espinoza

    4. Picked to Pieces: The Cost of Opportunity

    Pamela Twyman Hoff

    5. Surviving a Difficult Tenure Process: Tips for Junior Faculty of Color

    Cynthia Lee

    6. They See Us, but They Don’t Really See Us

    Jessica Lavariega Monforti and Melissa R. Michelson

    7. Promotion while Pregnant and Black

    Jemimah Li Young and Dorothy E. Hines

    Section 2: Academic Leadership

    8. Senior Chicana Feminist Scholars: Some Notes on Survival in Hostile Contexts

    Donna Castañeda, Yvette G. Flores, and Yolanda Flores Niemann

    9. Can I Charge My Therapy to the University?

    Jodi O’Brien

    10. Racial Harm in a Predominantly White Liberal University: An Institutional Autoethnography of White Fragility

    Lynn Fujiwara

    11. Presumptions of Incompetence, Gender Sidelining, and Women Law Deans

    Laura M. Padilla

    Section 3: Social Class

    12. Unlikely Alliances from Appalachia to East L.A.: Insider Without and Outsider Within

    Desdamona Rios and Kim A. Case

    13. Academia Is Violence: Generatives from a First-Generation, Low-Income PhD Mother of Color

    Jamiella Brooks

    14. Silent Bias and Resisting Narratives of Deficit: Social Class and Poverty in the Academy

    Gabriella Gutiérrez y Muhs

    15. They Don’t Call It Work for Nothing: Navigating Classism in Academic Relationships

    Amelia Ortega

    Section 4: Bullying, White Fragility, and Microaggressions

    16. Making Visible the Dead Bodies in the Room: Women of Color/QPOC in Academia

    Susie E. Nam

    17. The Alpha Female and the Sinister Seven

    Sahar F. Aziz

    18. Mindful Heresy as Praxis for Change: Responding to Microaggressions as Building Blocks of Hegemony

    Sarah Amira de la Garza

    19. Exposure to Discrimination, Cultural Betrayal, and Intoxication as a Black Female Graduate Student Applying for Tenure-Track Faculty Positions

    Jennifer M. Gómez

    20. Through a White Woman’s Tears: Fragility, Guilt, and the Journey toward Allyship

    Rachelle A. C. Joplin

    21. And Still We Rise

    Adrien K. Wing

    22. Closet Chair and Committee Side Piece: Black Women STEM Faculty at HBCUs

    Marcia Allen Owens

    23. In Name Only: A Principal Investigator’s Struggle for Authority

    Nellie Tran

    Section 5: Activism, Resistance, and Public Engagement

    24. Spectacular Bodies: Racism, Pregnancy, and the Code of Silence in Academe

    Julia H. Chang

    25. Hashtag: Social Media as a Source for Developing Community

    Meredith D. Clark

    26. My Tenure Denial

    Grace Park

    27. In Lak’ech: The Interconnectedness between Faculty and Students of Color

    Yessenia Manzo

    28. Securing Support in an Unequal Profession

    Meera E. Deo

    29. Healing Is Speaking: Stories Evolving Perceptions of Microaggressions, Abuse, and Racial Battle Fatigue—The Good Mind in Action

    Melissa Michal Slocum

    30. The Social Ecology of Tokenism in Higher Education Institutions

    Yolanda Flores Niemann

    31. Why I Clap Back against Racist Trolls Who Attack Black Women Academics

    Stacey Patton

    32. Unconquered and Unconquerable: A Chickasaw Woman’s Quest for Tenure

    Rachel Tudor

    Afterword

    Deena J. González

    About the Authors

    Index

    Foreword

    Presumed Incompetent in the Era of Diversity

    Angela P. Harris

    It is a familiar cliché to call the return of a product or service back by popular demand. In the case of Presumed Incompetent, however, the claim is true. After the publication of the first volume, we editors found ourselves met with standing-room-only crowds in university and hotel conference rooms across the country. The book kindled countless reading groups—and action groups. And in private conversations after the talk or workshop, or via email the following week, each of us got the question: Will there be another book? Because I have a story to tell.

    Presumed Incompetent II extends the conversation of the first book, addressing the joys and perils of allyship, the lure of tokenism, and the range of strategies faculty and administrators employ to avoid accidentally making institutional change. And it comes at a crucial historical moment: a time when Women of Color in academic America are facing new threats to their success and their ability to survive and thrive.

    In 2012, when Presumed Incompetent: The Intersections of Race and Class for Women in Academia first hit the shelves, Barack Obama was still president of the United States, and it was common for liberals to imagine that the nation had become post-racial. Today, as this volume is released, we all know better. White nationalism is surging around the globe, powering a wave of antidemocratic, pro-authoritarian movements from the bottom and from the top. In many public spaces, the liberal values of pluralism, tolerance, the rule of law, and the objectivity of facts are now being actively attacked. Alongside the discrediting of these values, it is no longer surprising to hear full-throated defenses of White supremacy—sometimes accompanied by open violence, as in Charlottesville, Virginia, in 2017—uttered in public and private spaces.

    At the same time, many hegemonic institutions remain identified with liberalism, where the open espousal of White supremacy remains anathema. The world of higher education in the United States (like the world of the mega-corporations that dominate our daily lives, such as Google, Microsoft, Facebook, Amazon, and Apple), is governed instead by a racial logic known as diversity. In a recent book, sociologist Ellen Berrey (2015) explains that in the United States, diversity is a form of symbolic politics that has emerged to reconcile a contradiction: it is undesirable for liberal institutions to be portrayed as racist, but at the same time institutional elites have no desire to change existing racist power structures.

    How can Women of Color and working-class women in academia negotiate this difficult moment—caught between outright White supremacy and the soft bigotry of liberal institutions driven by diversity logic? Readers of this second volume of Presumed Incompetent will find a gold mine of tactics and strategies for disrupting institutional practices that harm academic Women of Color, and a wealth of advice on self-care throughout the process. Above all, readers will find the precious knowledge that they are not alone.

    To be a Woman of Color in academia is, too often, to be presumed incompetent. Yet in academia as in other spaces, Women of Color continue to rise, exercising their creativity and expressing their joy. In the face of academia’s unspoken norm to be silent about one’s vulnerability, the contributors to this volume, like the contributors to the first volume, are committed to telling the truth with wit, bitterness, and insight. This book is a gift.

    Reference

    Berrey, E. (2015). The enigma of diversity. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

    Acknowledgments

    I thank the brave women who contributed to this volume. I also thank the many women who are not represented in this volume, but who are pushing back against daily microaggressions, discrimination, and breaches of trust from their peers, students, and upline administrators. I am grateful for our true allies across race/ethnicity. They understand that being an ally does not mean simply declaring that one is not racist. Rather, to be an ally is to take action against racism in its many forms, to be righteously angry when injustice happens to us, to make sure that as we fight back we do not stand alone, and to see, and seek to change, overt and unconscious racism in their own personal and professional contexts. I thank the graduate and undergraduate students on my Critical Race Psychology research team for inspiring me with their seemingly unending energy and tenacity. My special gratitude to my husband of forty-three years, Barry Niemann, and our two children, Russell Flores Niemann and Mychaelanne Flores Niemann. Our family unit continues to be the core and foundation of my own strength, energy, and well-being.

    Yolanda Flores Niemann

    First I would like to thank all the women professors who persevered in less than ideal situations, knowing they had much to offer the academy. Thank you for knowing your worth and for insisting on justice. Thank you to the women who hold me up always: Marianne Mork, VME, Kathy Cook, Theresa Jones, Mare Blocker, Cynthia Moe-Lobeda, Guadalupe Vega, Graciela Vega, Olga Díaz, Patrice Vecchione, Shirley Flores Muñoz, Lucy Ochoa, and Marú Marquez. Many thanks to my colleagues and friends in academia: Jeanette Rodríguez, Mary-Antoinette Smith, Connie Anthony, Jodi O’Brien, Nalini Iyer, Helena María Viramontes, Norma Cantú, Cristina Herrera, Theresa Delgadillo, Susana Gallardo, Kari Lerum, Shari Dworkin, Sabina Neem, Jean Anton, Martina Ramírez, and especially Theresa Earenfight. I always acknowledge Yvonne Yarbro-Bejarano for sharing with me her indomitable Chicanx feminism, and thanks to all the holy people who have crossed my path: my mother Socorro Favela, Enrico, Eleuterio, and Eric Muhs, Noemi Natividad, and especially Aldo U. Reséniz, Pierre Loua, and Debbie Radbill, who always bless us. Thanks also to Sheilah Serfaty, John McLean, Armando Miguélez, Alex Flores, Bill Buckley, Jesús Rosales, Steven Bender, John Fraire, Martina Iñiguez, Juan Velasco, Carole Snee, and Ken Weisner. I also want to offer this work to my wonderful cousins, especially those present for my mother: Ofelia Fabela, Maria Elena Reséndiz, Reme Mena, Adela and Lilly Lechuga, Carmen, Eligia, Beatriz, Lourdes, Andrés, and Fidencio Favela, Joel Frías Rivera, Jesen Fayad, and Tania, Conchita, Benjamín, Jesús, and Alfonso Rivera. Thank you so much to Veronica Eldredge for her magnificent cover art and assistance with formatting and improving our manuscript, and of course I would like to especially thank my coeditors Yolanda Flores Niemann and Carmen González, who worked very hard to make sure we included some amazing and innovative work. I thank my dean, David Powers, associate dean, Kan Liang, Natasha Martin, and especially our provost, Shane Martin. For the poets who find poetry everywhere: Demetria Martínez, Xánath Caraza, Claudia Castro Luna, Catalina Cantú, Odilia Rodriguez, Peggy Morrison, Raúl Sánchez, Octavio Quintanilla, Jim Cantú, John Laue, and Carmen Giménez-Smith.

    Excerpts from Silent Bias and Resisting Narratives of Deficit: Social Class and Poverty in the Academy, including the initial poem, first appeared as part of The Adobe Ceiling over the Yellow-Brick Road in Menah Pratt-Clarke & Johanna B. Maes (Eds.), Journeys of Social Justice: Women of Color Presidents in the Academy (221–224) (New York: Peter Lang, 2017).

    Gabriella Gutiérrez y Muhs

    I would like to thank the Women of Color whose enthusiastic response to the first volume of Presumed Incompetent encouraged us to produce a second. I hope that this book will provide solace and inspiration, and serve as a tool to transform the academic workplace.

    Carmen G. Gonzàlez

    Introduction

    Yolanda Flores Niemann, Gabriella Gutiérrez y Muhs, and Carmen G. González

    Universities have reputations for being liberal. We think of collegial environments where people with PhDs engage in intellectually stimulating conversation, sharing ideas and respectfully supporting one another. In large part, that idea is often true. When the reality departs from the myth, however, the context can be ugly enough to derail careers and injure physical and mental health. Such hostile climates are grounded in racism, sexism, homophobia, and classism. The related behaviors include shaming, disregard of cultural values, bullying, harassment, trolling, gaslighting, betrayal, lying, tokenization, coercion, stealing intellectual property, stealing grants, silencing, and blatant disregard for university policies and processes.

    In contrast to the myth, when it comes to inclusiveness, universities may be the last bastion of elitism and sanctioned racism in the United States. According to the National Center for Education Statistics (2018), in 2016, 76 percent of all US full-time faculty were White (non-Hispanic), 6 percent African American, 5 percent Latinx, and 10 percent Asian American/Pacific Islander. American Indian/Alaska Natives and persons of two or more races each made up 1 percent or fewer of US full-time faculty. Among those in the tenure-track ranks, the most coveted positions within academia, 82 percent of all full professors were White in 2016 (National Center for Education Statistics, 2018). The fact is Faculty of Color remain underrepresented in comparison to the 2017 US population, which is 76.6 percent White (non-Hispanic), 13.4 percent Black/African American, 5.8 percent Asian, and 18.1 percent Hispanic/Latino (US Census, 2017). University presidents extol the virtues of diversity, and most universities now have diversity or equal opportunity offices, ostensibly to facilitate inclusion of historically underrepresented groups in academia. Yet the numbers of Faculty of Color are disconnected from the various hierarchies of degrees conferred yearly across demographic groups (US Department of Education, 2016). The rhetoric around the importance of diversity seems to be just that—rhetoric without accountability that ends up being meaningless. As Faculty of Color enter tokenized environments, where fewer than 15 percent of their numbers are present, their faculty roles are impacted, even changed, their career opportunities are hindered or halted, and their identities are disrupted by the service they are called upon to engage in by virtue of their uniqueness in the context.

    Service in academia comes in many forms. The most common are committee work—at the department, college, university, professional (e.g., advisory boards, journal editorial boards), and community levels (e.g., chambers of commerce, school districts, fund-raising for scholarships, miscellaneous speaking engagements); student mentoring; informal, appointed department roles; and public relations (e.g., speaking on behalf of the university). Formal administrative positions are service that falls in a separate category, as persons in those positions are typically paid a salary for filling those roles. The other service roles, however, are examples of universities asking some faculty to engage in a great deal of time-consuming and unpaid service while still actively conducting their scholarship, something that is almost impossible to do at the same time. That is, universities sanction inequitable service from some faculty members, typically women. Then these faculty members are punished for their service through inequitable faculty evaluations.

    In other words, faculty who engage in considerable quantity and quality of service, often assigned, and often because they are good citizens, cannot be expected to compete with faculty who engage in comparatively little or virtually no service when it comes to scholarly productivity. Yet the latter faculty receive no retribution or forfeiture of rewards for their lack of service, while the good citizens do, for their comparative lack of productivity. There is a penalty for service, which universities claim to value, including student mentoring, but there is no penalty for lack of service. Multiple narratives in this volume provide examples of this structural racial tax and emotional labor imposed upon women across race/ethnicity in the science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) fields and upon Women of Color in all disciplines.

    Academic Leadership

    Women of Color in upper-level leadership positions, such as deans, chancellors, provosts, and presidents, are relatively rare, especially in comparison to White men. Although White women have made some progress entering these roles in the last decades, their numbers are still small, though not as small as the ranks of Women of Color in these high-level positions. Part of the reason for their scarcity is the lack of women across race/ethnicity in full-professor ranks. When there are few or only one in a given context, they enter tokenized situations. The manner and ramification of this token status is elaborated upon in this volume. As noted in narratives here, serving in these roles takes ganas, thick skin, and commitment.

    Yet we need women in positions of formal power and authority who see and understand what others fail to notice. We need leaders with vision to make changes toward increasing equity. We need such leaders to advocate for the less powerful. Their critical race and feminist lenses will move them to support people, rather than university brands. Such persons can effect institutional, system, and cultural change from within.

    Death and Dying in Academia

    One of the authors of this introduction had two Professors of Color who killed themselves while she was a student—one when she was an undergraduate and the other when she was a graduate student. The author was angry with them—how could they, elite intellectuals at a first-rate university, kill themselves? How could they not choose to fight but instead end their lives? However, they are not the only persons to die while striving to fit into the academic world and achieve success as defined in that elite environment. While we may feel helpless when we hear about scholars who end their lives, we also feel their anguish, desperation, and painful acceptance of their circumstances. And we realize that by not supporting and fully embracing outliers in the academy, especially Women of Color, we are acting irresponsibly. We realize that the best antidote for this disease of death by academia is to be communal and transparent about the hostile contexts experienced by too many of our colleagues.

    Yet in the first volume of Presumed Incompetent we did not address the fact that people die because of both the dehumanizing tenure process and the sometimes careless and biased judgments and decisions of department chairs, deans, colleagues, and other high-level administrators. We did not address how physical and psychological death and dying might be avoided with appropriate pre-tenure mentoring by our institutions, departments, colleagues, and the academy at large. This volume directly addresses death and violence. It includes Susie E. Nam’s chapter, Making Visible the Dead Bodies in the Room: Women of Color/QPOC in Academia, about the death of her colleague in a major state university. This volume contains Julia Chang’s essay, Spectacular Bodies: Racism, Pregnancy, and the Code of Silence in Academe, about childbirth and her loss of health due to the inhumanity of her academic workplace. Jamiella Brooks’s work also speaks of a certain violence in academia that produces disease and death in Academia Is Violence: Generatives from a First-Generation, Low-Income PhD Mother of Color. Adrien Wing’s chapter, And Still We Rise, talks about suicide and names African American scholars who died prematurely from a variety of illnesses that may have been caused or exacerbated by their experiences in academia. These narratives provide a somber reminder that sometimes success means surviving, psychologically and physically, and that death comes in multiple forms.

    Multiple narratives in this volume also address the issue of damaged mental health. While death is the extreme consequence of severe psychological distress, many Women of Color may be so busy surviving that they lack the time and energy to seek emotional support. Such support can come from a variety of sources: family, friends, mentors and allies, religion and spirituality, meditation, and professional healers and therapists. Meera Deo’s chapter, Securing Support in an Unequal Profession, discusses diverse sources of support as well the policies and practices that universities can adopt to ease the psychological toll on Women of Color.

    Fighting Back

    The women in this volume of Presumed Incompetent provide many examples of how women are increasingly fighting back. They are battling in toxic environments that include bullying, sexual harassment, microaggressions, trolling, gaslighting, shaming, stalking, abuse of power, and misuse of and/or disregard for policies and processes. Women are engaging in battles against hostile climates in different ways, understanding that even small wins can be inspiring and empowering and lead to larger changes. For example, we agree to be the first African American tenure-track faculty member, or the first Asian American department chair or dean. We are preparing students with strong anti-racist, anti-sexist, and anti-homophobic foundations. We are addressing policies and processes that subject students to alienation and trauma. After achieving tenure, we are using our power to fight the system from within, questioning expectations of subservience and kowtowing, and distinguishing accurate from biased evaluative information. We are creating future faculty role models.

    We are using university policies and procedures to fight back. We are operating with consciousness about politics—for example, about who may or may not be an ally when we are subject to hostile environments. We are using various survival strategies, such as journaling, to remain sane. We are finding online supportive communities that are lacking in our immediate work contexts. We are embracing our emotions, including anger. We are keeping detailed records that counter the narratives of those who seek to harm us. We are writing about race: calling out hazing, microaggressions, name-calling, stereotyping, passive-aggressive hostility, and White fragility. We are holding diversity offices accountable to effect change, and not just make paper and shape empty rhetoric. We are insisting on meaningful inclusiveness, rather than the disingenuousness of tolerance and color blindness. We are collecting and publicizing data and using it to effect change. We are calling out patriarchy, bro-propriating (a man taking credit for a woman’s idea), mansplaining (a man patronizingly explaining something, often beginning by interrupting a woman), manterrupting (a man interrupting a woman) and bro-opting (a man adopting a woman’s idea as his own). We are including men in our own identity groups. We are honoring emotions, including anger. We are insisting that the choice to become pregnant must not be punished. We are recognizing and resisting patriarchal females, gossip, whispering cowards, the weaponization of information, expectations of silence, and hegemonic politeness. We are asserting the value of intersectionality—in data, research, hiring, and cultural narratives. We are creating allies and recognizing the collective as social capital for power, strength, success, and healing.

    The essays in this volume are organized as follows.

    1. Tenure and Promotion

    Section 1 sets the stage for the remainder of the book by naming many of the systemic biases that pervade the academic workplace and offering pragmatic, solution-oriented recommendations. These chapters examine the formidable obstacles that Women of Color encounter on the road to tenure and promotion, including inequitable teaching loads, crushing service obligations, race and gender bias in the evaluation of teaching and scholarship, pregnancy discrimination, lack of mentoring, sexual harassment, stalking, bullying, and the painful reminder that skinfolk are not always kinfolk—that those who share our social identities are not necessarily allies. The authors describe in gripping detail the lengths to which colleagues will go to sabotage the careers of Women of Color, and offer a variety of tools that can be deployed to resist, fight back, and prevail.

    2. Academic Leadership

    This section provides a rare window into the working lives of Women of Color who have entered the ranks of senior academic leadership—as well as roadmaps for those who aspire to follow in their footsteps. Creating an equitable and inclusive campus climate requires a diverse leadership team. However, Women of Color who occupy leadership positions quickly discover that there is an inherent conflict between their personal values and the expectations of senior administrators who want to protect the university’s brand. Academic leaders who are deemed too ethnic, too queer, too feminist, too angry, too honest, or too radical may find themselves dismissed from their positions. Women of Color who navigate these conflicting imperatives often question whether they are transforming their institutions or facilitating the institution’s diversity marketing. They may be viewed with suspicion by faculty colleagues while being excluded from meaningful decision-making by university provosts and presidents.

    Women of Color who rise to the highest echelons of the profession also continue to battle the presumption of incompetence along with gender sidelining. They experience challenges to their authority, inconsistent institutional support, ageism, and the perception that they have become sellouts or careerists.

    The contributors to this section demonstrate that these hurdles are daunting but not insurmountable. These challenges include the hegemonic politeness of academic culture that serves to protect White fragility and perpetuate existing power relations. The pioneering leaders whose stories animate this section provide a wealth of strategies to combat the presumption of incompetence and increase the representation of Women of Color in senior leadership positions.

    3. Social Class

    This section examines class bias in academia and its intersection with race, gender, pregnancy, physical and mental (dis)ability, and other markers of identity. Academia generates voluminous research on poverty but rarely addresses the impact of low academic salaries on faculty, especially adjuncts, who must take on multiple jobs to make ends meet and to support parents and siblings whose sacrifices made their academic careers possible. The professor is expected to be a poster figure unburdened by anything associated with life, free from poverty and debt, no visible pregnancy or family to support, in full physical and mental health (see chapter by Jamiella Brooks in this volume). Women of Color who struggle with family financial or care-giving responsibilities, who face debilitating physical or mental illness, or who navigate the tenure and promotion process while pregnant are frequently presumed incapable of diligently and competently fulfilling their professional responsibilities.

    Academics from the working class face extraordinary pressure to conform to White middle- and upper-class norms not only in speech, dress, mannerisms, and vocabulary but also in the choices they make about teaching, scholarship, and service. Those who pursue qualitative or community-based research, teach or write from critical class, race, and gender perspectives, attempt to diversify the curriculum, or work with underserved or at-risk communities frequently find their competence questioned and their accomplishments devalued. They may also be shunned and accused of incivility if their working-class candor clashes with middle class passive aggressive communication styles.

    The contributors to this volume challenge the deficit model that assigns negative attributes to working-class identity. They identify the unique skills and insights that working-class scholars bring to the academic workplace, including community-building skills honed through years of intersectional class-conscious alliances. The essays in this section demonstrate how working-class coping strategies and values (including solidarity, transparency, sharing, and openly expressing emotion) can create a more welcoming and inclusive environment for all marginalized groups.

    4. Bullying, White Fragility, and Microaggressions

    Women of Color who challenge White, patriarchal norms and defy race and gender stereotypes are often depicted as angry, ungrateful, and threatening. They are frequently ostracized, disciplined, denied tenure and promotion, and silenced, not only by White faculty and administrators but also by fellow Scholars of Color who have internalized racist and sexist beliefs. This section directly and unabashedly discusses the myriad forms of abuse, exploitation, and disrespect endured by Women of Color in academia and their impacts on the bodies and psyches of those who are targeted as well as those who witness the torment of others. The daily microaggressions as well as the premeditated attacks can cause or exacerbate physical and mental illness, and can lead to miscarriages, suicide, or premature death from cancer, heart disease, and other serious ailments. The essays in this section are harrowing, but they provide valuable advice to Women of Color and those who serve as allies on ways to challenge and disrupt oppressive practices and processes.

    5. Activism, Resistance, and Public Engagement

    The final section of this volume is devoted to activism and resistance in a variety of venues and through a variety of means. The contributors to this section share inspiring and courageous narratives about their struggles against marginalization and abuse, including: filing a complaint regarding a hostile work environment while enduring two miscarriages; using social media to create a supportive online community; challenging faculty to incorporate a racial justice lens into the curriculum; healing from racial battle fatigue by talking openly in safe spaces; appealing tenure denial; combating tokenism; confronting racist internet trolls; and filing (and winning) sex discrimination and retaliation lawsuits.

    Summary

    One of the key lessons of this volume of Presumed Incompetent is the importance of building community, mentoring the next generation, and developing intersectional alliances in order to challenge the oppressive practices that have inflicted so much harm on our communities. And of course, we must continue telling our stories. For a glimpse of the impact of the narratives in the first volume of Presumed Incompetent, please see the website of the University Press of Colorado & Utah State University. In the space of some of the narratives in this volume, these stories are told, in part, from the vernacular and speech of the authors’ cultural context. As such, we are legitimatizing the power of these ways of interpersonal communication.

    We received almost 150 narratives for this volume of Presumed Incompetent, courageously contributed by women across rank and race/ethnicity. Regrettably, space constraints kept us from bringing to light all of their resolutely presented experiences. Sharing our stories validates the realities of others who face similar experiences, and affords all persons, including academic leaders from a range of power and position standpoints, the opportunity to learn about and intercede in the severe and life-altering forms of violence occurring under their noses.

    References

    National Center for Education Statistics. (2018). Fast facts, race/ethnicity of college faculty. Retrieved from https://nces.ed.gov/fastfacts/display.asp?id=61.

    University Press of Colorado & Utah State University Press. https://upcolorado.com/utah-state-university-press/item/2338-presumed-incompetent.

    US Census Bureau. (2017). Population estimates, July 1, 2017 (V2017). Retrieved from https://www.census.gov/quickfacts/fact/table/US/PST045217.

    US Department of Education. (2016). Digest of education statistics (52nd ed.). Retrieved from https://nces.ed.gov/pubs2017/2017094.pdf.

    SECTION ONE

    Tenure and Promotion

    Jacquelyn Bridgeman

    Still I Rise

    Lolita Buckner Inniss

    The Lucky Law Professor and the Eucatastrophic Moment

    Penelope Espinoza

    Tenure with a Termination Letter

    Pamela Twyman Hoff

    Picked to Pieces: The Cost of Opportunity

    Cynthia Lee

    Surviving a Difficult Tenure Process: Tips for Junior Faculty of Color

    Jessica Lavariega Monforti and Melissa R. Michelson

    They See Us, but They Don’t Really See Us

    Jemimah Li Young and Dorothy E. Hines

    Promotion while Pregnant and Black

    ONE

    Still I Rise

    Jacquelyn Bridgeman

    I am an African American, cisgender, heterosexual woman who has spent over half of my life in Wyoming, first as a child growing up from ages six to eighteen and again when I returned in 2002 at the age of twenty-eight to join the faculty at the University of Wyoming College of Law. I was the first African American tenure-track professor hired at Wyoming’s law school. Before hiring me, the college had never hired a minority tenure-track professor. I was the first Associate Dean of Color at the College of Law, I was the second Person of Color to be appointed a dean in the history of my institution, and I am still the only woman to serve as dean of our college in its nearly 100-year history. At the time of my hire there was only one American-born tenured Professor of Color in the entire university, which at that time had 612 full-time instructional faculty.

    Mine is a narrative about transformation. Transformation of self, transformation of one’s circumstances, transformation of one’s institution. It’s about how I went from almost not getting tenure to having one of the most secure positions at my university. How I went from being the lowest-paid faculty member in my college to being one of the highest paid in the entire university. How I helped my institution move from a place that had one Tenured Faculty Member of Color to now having so many I don’t even know them all. It is about how I learned how to blossom and thrive where I was planted, despite the unconscious racism, overt racism, and rampant sexism I have endured. It is about coming to understand that perhaps the most important work we ever do is not for ourselves, but for others.

    The Pre-tenure Crucible and How It Has Shaped My Career

    In the nearly sixteen years I have been in academia I have begun to think of a professor position as akin to a polygamous marriage, one that exists between the university, oneself, and one’s colleagues, with the tenure-track process much like a formal courtship in which all parties are trying to determine if they would like to make a long-term commitment. As with most such relationships, mine with the University of Wyoming College of Law and my colleagues went through a honeymoon period, which lasted almost a year.

    I often wonder if the honeymoon period would have lasted longer, perhaps indefinitely, had I done a few things differently. Would it have lasted had I not been an outspoken member of the faculty? Or an unconventional, albeit effective and popular, teacher? Or if I had not written on controversial topics like race, gender, and Black identity? Or if I had continued to straighten my hair? Perhaps it would have lasted longer had I not been the first female professor in many years to have children while on tenure track or if I hadn’t also taught in African American studies and insisted on holding those classes in the law school. Even in hindsight it is hard to judge whether doing any of those things differently would have altered the situation I found myself in the year prior to my tenure vote. After all, not doing those things or doing them differently would not have changed the fundamental problem many of my colleagues had with me—the color of my skin. Although it was a problem none of them ever expressed directly, I came to realize over the course of the first six years of my career that the issue affected the evaluation of all aspects of my job.

    Teaching: The Unrequited Labor of Love

    During the time I have been at Wyoming I have been voted a class hooder, teacher of the year multiple times, and I have received the university’s highest award for teaching excellence. In response to the question, How did you become a good teacher? the honest answer is Unmitigated fear. The first day I taught my hands shook during the entire seventy-five-minute class period and I spoke so quickly several students considered dropping the class for fear they would never be able to understand me. I had nightmares—about accidentally oversleeping and missing class, about not being able to answer questions, about missing a big change in the law—that robbed me of sleep nearly the entire first year I taught. I broke out in shingles.

    When I took my position at Wyoming I was twenty-eight years old, which meant over half the student body was older than I. I had never taught before. The one African American third-year student and I were the only visible People of Color in the entire school. It became clear almost immediately, when one of my students addressed me by my first name without permission within a few weeks of the start of my first semester, that the imprimatur of respect and deference afforded by virtue of standing in front of the class and being called professor did not apply to me.

    I overcame my initial day-to-day fear and survived my first year of teaching by working like a crazy person. In one of my evaluations my dean referred to me as a natural teacher. I nearly laughed when I read that statement because the reality was I was anything but. I just worked hard. I worked hard and I taught for the benefit of my students. Fairly early in my teaching career I had an epiphany that changed everything for me. I realized teaching had very little to do with me and everything to do with my students. Ironically, it was my connection to Wyoming that caused me to focus on my students and fueled my drive to become a good teacher.

    We are the only law school in Wyoming. Currently, the governor, all of the state Supreme Court justices, many lower-court judges, state legislators, and practicing attorneys are graduates of our law school. Because of the small practices that most of our graduates will enter, they must hit the ground running. They will not have the luxury of a few years after graduation to learn how to be good attorneys. Consequently, if we do not educate our students well, the entire state suffers. Once I understood this, my teaching became about how I could best prepare my students for the jobs they might do upon graduation and much less about me.

    Further, I felt very strongly that I did not want to subject my students to the hostile, alienating, and traumatic experience that law school had been for me. I adopted an approach whereby I wanted each student to feel like they got their money’s worth such that they would regret ever missing a class. I called on students in law firms or groups to make answering in class less daunting, and I used group work, simulations, and other activities to encourage active learning, cooperation, and support among the students. I used a variety of techniques to cater to a range of learning styles, and I strove to make class fun.

    With respect to the tenure process and my continued longevity, teaching as I have chosen to teach has been a mixed blessing. My teaching approach is extremely time intensive, which makes balancing the scholarship requirements, tremendous service obligations, and now administrative responsibilities that I also have that much more difficult. What’s more, being a good teacher, in and of itself, was not enough to save me or to insulate me from attacks on my scholarship or myself when it came time for my tenure decision. This was in part because my teaching received less value during my evaluation for tenure due to race.

    The transparent nature of our tenure and promotion process allowed me to compare the work my colleagues did to my own and the kinds of comments they received to the ones I received. Consequently, I was able to witness firsthand how several of my colleagues attributed the poor teaching of my White male counterparts—often characterized in their student evaluations as an inability to convey information in an accessible and understandable way—to the high level of those teachers’ intellect. In contrast, those same colleagues postulated that the students liked me because I was too easy on them and too helpful—an assessment made despite the fact that evaluation after evaluation described me as challenging and demanding and my classes as some of the hardest the students had taken in law school. The consequence was that my White male colleagues got the same or even more credit for their teaching as I did, even though they did less work and had poorer evaluations. Consequently, that allowed them more time to engage in other pursuits, such as their scholarship.

    While a part of me has resented the fact that I received less credit for my teaching versus some of my colleagues, I don’t believe that is the crux of the problem. Rather, I believe my colleagues should have been held to the same standards as I. Since teaching well garnered me little marginal benefit in the tenure and promotion process, there was little incentive for me to be more than a mediocre teacher. This was true despite the fact that quality teaching is something typically valued and rewarded at our institution. Similarly, since my colleagues were rewarded for mediocrity there was little incentive to improve their teaching. None of which served to help students and all of which I worked to change when the opportunity presented itself.

    Service: The Structural Racial Tax

    While the time I have devoted to teaching has been substantial both before and after tenure, that time has been matched, if not exceeded, by the time I have spent in service work. When I arrived at the University of Wyoming there were four other Black professors. There was an African American studies program in existence, but it was on life support. It became clear almost immediately that if I, and others like me, did not teach in and support the program it wasn’t going to survive. At the same time, there were not enough mentors and means of support for Students of Color, African American or otherwise, and there were not enough people from underrepresented groups to add diversity to the many places where it was desperately needed. That meant that the five of us found ourselves very early in our careers being called upon to keep the African American studies program afloat and sitting on, if not running, all of the university committees that wanted or needed an African American presence or just a Person of Color. The five of us mentored graduate and undergraduate Students of Color throughout the university, in addition to our regular advising and mentoring duties within our own departments, and we frequently helped organize, support, and consult with the greater African American community.

    In addition to the service burdens that come with being Black, there are those that come from being in a sparsely populated state. In a state of roughly 500,000 inhabitants, people with professional expertise are not plentiful. Thus, all professors, regardless of race or gender, are frequently called upon to serve when expertise of one kind or another is needed.

    I think there is no question I could have done much less service without it negatively affecting my tenure evaluation, and now that I am a tenured, full, senior professor, I could also do less. Moreover, less service pre-tenure would have made my life after tenure easier, though not all classes for African American studies would have been covered. It would have meant that there would have been even fewer than five people to help carry the load of mentoring, advocating, and serving in all the many ways our institution needed People of Color to serve.

    I have always believed that the opportunities my forebearers fought for mean very little if, once one takes advantage of the opportunity, one does not work to change and better the institution of which one is a part. It means little if one does not speak out regarding things of import and if one does not work to help pave the way for others to follow. Accordingly, I have tried to make all the service work I have done transformative and lasting. Whenever possible I have tried to take on only work that would lead to significant change at my institution or open up opportunities for others. For example, when I served on hiring committees I made sure we advertised and targeted underrepresented populations, often doing extra work to build a diverse applicant pool and to encourage people from underrepresented groups to apply. I then fought for people from these groups to be interviewed and hired. Because I was the token member on so many hiring committees, over time this strategy helped change the makeup of people hired at my institution. Later, when I was in charge of appointing hiring committees, I made sure they were staffed with people committed to diversity and inclusiveness.

    Similarly, I found that many in my institution were willing to make changes and were willing to listen and learn if there was someone to lead, or to educate, so I took the lead in a lot of initiatives and worked to educate my colleagues in the process of us doing work together. For example, during my second year, I agreed to co-chair a fledgling university-wide committee that was tasked with creating a weeklong set of events centered around the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday. I used my service on that committee to develop relationships across the university with people who were committed to issues of diversity and inclusion. We developed programming for that event that centered on sparking dialogue and engendering change on a range of issues university wide. Although I no longer chair this committee, it continues and has become institutionalized, carrying on the work we started over fourteen years ago.

    Throughout the years, I have pushed for and advocated for change at every turn, employing different strategies depending on the circumstances. In addition to the kinds of service work just described, I have also put myself in administrative positions that have allowed me to make the kinds of decisions that would help bring about change. For example, when I was associate dean and then dean of the law school, I was instrumental in changing the way we targeted and recruited underrepresented students and in changing the kinds of programs we had in place to support them once they arrived. Those improvements significantly increased our minority student population at the law school, at least during the time I was dean.

    The university at which I now work in many ways does not resemble the institution I came to sixteen years ago. Whereas I was the first tenure-track Person of Color hired at our law school, four out of our twenty current faculty members are People of Color and all four have tenure and are full professors. I no longer know every American-born Professor of Color at our university. We have created a social justice research center, and in this past year have launched a new school, Culture, Gender and Social Justice. We hold weeklong all-university events twice a year devoted to issues of diversity, equity, and inclusion. We have hired a chief diversity officer and we now require every search committee to undergo diversity training and to actively recruit and try to hire people from underrepresented populations. These are just a few of the significant changes that have transformed my institution and the way we do business. I either spearheaded, led, or was heavily involved in the vast majority of these efforts and I continue to be, as we still have a lot of work to do.

    Scholarship: The Tenure-Track Third Rail

    You may write me down in history

    With your bitter twisted lies,

    You may trod me in the very dirt,

    But still, like dust, I’ll rise . . .

    You may shoot me with your words,

    You may cut me with your eyes.

    You may kill me with your hatefulness,

    But still, like air, I’ll rise . . .

    Bringing the gifts that my ancestors gave,

    I am the dream and the hope of the slave.

    I rise,

    I rise,

    I rise. (Angelou, 1994, pp. 163–164)

    There was a day in the spring of 2007, the year before I came up for tenure, when I was bitter, hurt, angry, tired, and very close to throwing in the towel, leaving academia, and finding something else to do with my life. On that particular day, as I sat struggling with an article that I knew I was going to have to once again defend to my colleagues, the refrain from Maya Angelou’s poem rang in my head: I rise, I rise, I rise. It was in that moment that I remembered all the people who came before me who sacrificed and endured so much so that I would have the opportunity about which I was so bitter and angry. An opportunity that still eludes many African Americans: African American professors nationwide are represented in percentages well below the percentage of African Americans in the general population, and 96 percent of tenured African American professors teach in historically Black colleges and universities (Strauss, 2015). It was in that moment that I decided that no matter what, I was going to find a way to hang on and get tenure.

    My reviews the first two years I was on the tenure track went smoothly, with no problems, but I began to notice a shift when I received my colleagues’ comments in connection with my third-year review. Whereas the comments I had received in my first two years were uniformly positive, now several of my colleagues began to raise subtle questions about my ability to finish enough scholarly projects in time for the final tenure vote. One colleague not so subtly expressed concerns about the quality and quantity of my scholarship. Another called me into her office and, ostensibly making sure I did not run into problems later, proceeded to tell me that she worried my first piece, one centered on issues of Black racial identity, did not demonstrate the kind of rigorous legal analysis my colleagues would require for a favorable tenure decision.

    Thankfully, our tenure process is quite transparent, allowing all faculty, regardless of rank, to review the files and sit in on the discussions for all members. Without this transparency, I would not have known that the faculty did not require one of my colleagues to undergo a fifth-year review, as they did me, even though she had fewer publications than I did at the same point in the tenure process. I would not have known that for at least one candidate a legal brief counted as one of the required pieces of scholarship. Or that the faculty never questioned whether another of my colleagues would produce scholarship of sufficient quantity and quality for tenure although he had yet to publish anything, or even submit a work in progress while at Wyoming, having been granted a shortened tenure track due to work completed at a different institution several years prior.

    By the time of my fifth-year review, the year before I was to go up for tenure, I had exceeded the college’s stated requirements regarding the requisite number of publications. The outside reviews of my previous scholarship were, without exception, positive. I had done more service than several of my colleagues combined and I had earned the university’s highest teaching award. One would have thought that determining to reappoint me, and to review me for tenure and promotion the following year, would have been an easy decision. It was not.

    In the comments accompanying the fifth-year faculty vote to reappoint me, some of my colleagues did finally reveal their animosity toward the subject matter of my scholarship. One went so far as to refer to critical race theory as alien. Others took a different tack and asserted that the grammar and punctuation in my writing was so poor that perhaps I should no longer be allowed to teach legal writing. There were also those who criticized my writing as too simplistic and conversational to be taken seriously. Yet I sat in another tenure and promotion meeting that year and watched the colleagues I knew were my chief detractors defend and advocate for tenure for a person who clearly fell short of the minimum scholarship requirements. That same person had received a scathing outside review, which the colleagues who were my chief critics blatantly

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