Abstracts
Abstract
The bureaucratic precepts engendered by modern universities produce a slew of negative effects inimical to educational justice. Drawing on historiographical evidence from the 1968 Strax Affair, a little-known protest held at the University of New Brunswick, we identify the arts of discombobulation as a novel approach to challenge the intellectual constraints imposed by university bureaucracies. By theorizing the arts of discombobulation, we aim to counteract bureaucracy’s most alienating affective residues, equipping scholars with an administrative arsenal capable of transforming the corporate academy into a playful, joyful environment. Inspired by cultural historian Johan Huizinga’s theory of the “play-function,” we introduce five interrelated tactics—burlesque versions of both formal and informal administrative practices—that amplify the contradictions inherent to the corporate academy’s contemporary bureaucratic structure: personalization, befuddlement, signal jamming, mapping, and abeyance. Even during moments of Kafkaesque bureaucratic defeat, discombobulation can generate a sense of heightened play necessary to fuel democratic resistance.
Keywords:
- universities,
- bureaucracy,
- resistance,
- discombobulation,
- play
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Appendices
Biographical notes
Harrison Dressler is an independent scholar based in Kingston, Ontario. He researches the history of education and disability as well as the politics of climate change.
Noah Pleshet is an assistant professor in the Department of Anthropology at the University of New Brunswick in Fredericton, Canada. He studies how culture and language affect human experiences of environmental change, the management of cultural and natural resources, and human-nonhuman animal interactions.
Daniel Tubb is an associate professor in the Department of Anthropology at the University of New Brunswick in Fredericton, Canada. His research focuses on agrarian change, the social lives of wetlands and rivers in the Colombian Caribbean, and questions of archival ownership, but he is also interested in thinking about power, bureaucracy, and the university.