Doctoral studies as a precarious identity process : deviance and the rational ideal of the doctoral process




Blomberg, Annika

PublisherTaylor & Francis

ABINGDON

2024

Studies in Higher Education

STUDIES IN HIGHER EDUCATION

STUD HIGH EDUC

15

0307-5079

1470-174X

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1080/03075079.2024.2420205

https://doi.org/10.1080/03075079.2024.2420205



Based on narrative interviews with late-phase doctoral candidates and early postdoctoral researchers, complemented by an autoethnographic diary, this study analyses the experiences of junior academics. A rational ideal of the doctoral process is identified, and its implications for doctoral students' identity work are discussed. While the rational ideal of the doctoral process has its uses, it prescribes the preferred conduct of doctoral studies and regulates doctoral identities through preferred conceptions of the self. Consequently, doctoral identity work often involves the construction of one's self in ways that seek to conform to the rational ideal while continuously failing to do so, making deviance from expectations a prevailing feature of it. These experiences of deviance from the elusive ideal both increase the precariousness of doctoral identities and reproduce the regimes of power in which doctoral students are embedded. Thus, this paper challenges the rational ideal and provides a more nuanced understanding of doctoral studies as a precarious, emotional and embodied identity construction process.



Last updated on 2025-20-08 at 12:21