My Intersecting Quests as a Disabled Independent Scholar

This colloquy, by graduate-student-led collective Project Spectrum, attempts to map out existing discussions around inclusion and equity in music academia, with a specific focus on identifying and analyzing the structures in academia that work against minoritized and historically excluded scholars....

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Main Author: Tekla Babyak
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Columbia University Libraries 2021-01-01
Series:Current Musicology
Online Access:https://journals.library.columbia.edu/index.php/currentmusicology/article/view/7844
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spelling doaj-a804387377e740358337e2abcfe6c3702021-02-05T17:54:48ZengColumbia University LibrariesCurrent Musicology0011-37352021-01-01107My Intersecting Quests as a Disabled Independent ScholarTekla Babyak0Independent Scholar This colloquy, by graduate-student-led collective Project Spectrum, attempts to map out existing discussions around inclusion and equity in music academia, with a specific focus on identifying and analyzing the structures in academia that work against minoritized and historically excluded scholars.  Tekla Babyak asks us to re-imagine what is on the other side of the pipeline. In her colloquy contribution, she shares her advocacy experience in fighting for both independent scholars’ and disabled scholars’ seat at the proverbial table. She imagines an academic discipline that would readily accept, acknowledge, and uplift independent scholars—instead of considering them half- or failed scholars for their lack of institutional affiliation. And she imagines an academic discipline that would readily include disabled scholars, not for their exceptionality in achieving scholarship, but for their ability to contribute to a more diverse and inclusive intellectual milieu. She critiques the ableism endemic to the academic pipeline, an ableism that veils the physical and also emotional, mental, and spiritual obstructions in our discipline’s path to so-called success. https://journals.library.columbia.edu/index.php/currentmusicology/article/view/7844
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tekla Babyak
spellingShingle Tekla Babyak
My Intersecting Quests as a Disabled Independent Scholar
Current Musicology
author_facet Tekla Babyak
author_sort Tekla Babyak
title My Intersecting Quests as a Disabled Independent Scholar
title_short My Intersecting Quests as a Disabled Independent Scholar
title_full My Intersecting Quests as a Disabled Independent Scholar
title_fullStr My Intersecting Quests as a Disabled Independent Scholar
title_full_unstemmed My Intersecting Quests as a Disabled Independent Scholar
title_sort my intersecting quests as a disabled independent scholar
publisher Columbia University Libraries
series Current Musicology
issn 0011-3735
publishDate 2021-01-01
description This colloquy, by graduate-student-led collective Project Spectrum, attempts to map out existing discussions around inclusion and equity in music academia, with a specific focus on identifying and analyzing the structures in academia that work against minoritized and historically excluded scholars.  Tekla Babyak asks us to re-imagine what is on the other side of the pipeline. In her colloquy contribution, she shares her advocacy experience in fighting for both independent scholars’ and disabled scholars’ seat at the proverbial table. She imagines an academic discipline that would readily accept, acknowledge, and uplift independent scholars—instead of considering them half- or failed scholars for their lack of institutional affiliation. And she imagines an academic discipline that would readily include disabled scholars, not for their exceptionality in achieving scholarship, but for their ability to contribute to a more diverse and inclusive intellectual milieu. She critiques the ableism endemic to the academic pipeline, an ableism that veils the physical and also emotional, mental, and spiritual obstructions in our discipline’s path to so-called success.
url https://journals.library.columbia.edu/index.php/currentmusicology/article/view/7844
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