Scholarship has nearly always been done from a position of privilege, with respect to the vast majority of the human population, as studying arcane texts or elusive natural phenomena has never been something most people have had time or resources to do. Academic work requires material access to information in libraries, and other resources like computers and (relatively quiet) space in which to write. Iit also entails social privilege--being able to say ānoā to claims upon oneās time from members of oneās family, community or institutionāand cultural privilege: all the different ways of knowing and writing that not everybody acquires.
Nearly a century ago, Virginia Woolf famously pointed out, in the essay whose title I borrow here, how difficult it has been for women to develop as writers; this is also true of other subaltern groups. Gramsci, toiling away at his notebooks in his prison cell, and other geniuses who have done important research and literary creation under the hardest circumstances, are the exceptions. Most of us mortal academics need time and space, and sometimes specialized equipment, to study and write.
I write from a location in academiaās complicated social and cultural hierarchy with a peculiar combination of privilege and its opposite: a tenured associate professor of education teaching 9th grade World History, a leader in the University of Puerto Ricoās faculty association which hopes to become a collective bargaining agent for all UPR faculty. For 4 years I was an academic senator at UPRās flagship campus, which teeters precariously at the edge of the R2 classification. Like all UPR faculty, we carry a 12-credit teaching load, and in the midst of UPRās fiscal crisis, a basic teaching load of 15 credits has been spotted more than once on the horizon.
Far beyond the university and the island I inhabit, many more institutions, including historically Black colleges and universities, community colleges, and small undergraduate institutions are being squeezed by neoliberal economic policies and demographic change, with the threat of downsizing or outright closure looming over many private institutions as well as UPR campuses.
Despite being immensely privileged with respect to other K-12 teachers, whose ranks I left to join academia, and to the growing number of non-tenure-track colleagues at UPR, my teaching and activist commitments leave me very little time for scholarly production. Those commitments are choices and my more academically productive colleagues at UPR mostly donāt devote as much time to their students or to our political situation as I do.