This piece offers autoethnographic reflections on crossroads to which many academics come: whether to seek (or postpone or avoid) parenthood and when. The author deeply explores the personal (her own trajectories from daughter and sister to potential mother and from graduate student to full professor) to reflect on structural constraints associated with graduate education, the academic job market, and institutional policies and politics.
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Marcus, J. ( 2007). Helping academics have families and tenure too. Change, 39(2) [electronic version].
Mason, M.A., & Goulden, M. ( 2004). Marriage and baby blues: Redefining gender equity in the academy. Annals of the American Academy, 596, 86-103.
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Phillips, A. ( 1994). On flirtation: Psychoanalytic essays on the uncommitted life. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
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Warner, J. ( 2008). The conversation. In E. Evans & C. Grant (Eds.), Mama PhD: Women write about motherhood and academic life (pp. 3-10). New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press.