Impostorization in the ivory tower: less discussed but more vexing than impostor syndrome

Author:

Gutiérrez Angélica S.ORCID,Cole Jean LeeORCID

Abstract

PurposeGiven the lack of research on the lived experiences of racially minoritized women in academia, this paper provides primary accounts of their experience with impostorization. Impostorization refers to the policies, practices and seemingly innocuous interactions that make or intend to make individuals (i.e. women of color) question their intelligence, competence and sense of belonging.Design/methodology/approachTo explore experiences with impostorization and identify effective coping strategies to counter the debilitating effects of impostorization, 17 semi-structured interviews were conducted with women of color PhD students and faculty at universities throughout the USA and across disciplines.FindingsWhile impostor syndrome, which refers to feelings of inadequacy that individuals experience and a fear that they will be discovered as fraud, has garnered much attention, the present accounts suggest that the more vexing issue in academia is impostorization, not impostor syndrome. Forms of impostorization include microaggressions, grateful guest syndrome, invisibility and inclusion taxation.Originality/valueThe interviews reveal the implicit and explicit ways in which academia impostorizes racially minoritized women scholars and the coping strategies that they use to navigate and survive within academia. The accounts demonstrate the pernicious effects of labeling feelings of inadequacy and unbelonging as impostor syndrome rather than recognizing that the problem is impostorization. This is a call to change the narrative and go from a fix-the-individual to a fix-the-institution approach.

Publisher

Emerald

Subject

Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management,Cultural Studies,Gender Studies

Reference25 articles.

1. Do you see me? An inductive examination of differences between women of color’s experiences of and responses to invisibility at work;Journal of Applied Psychology, Advance,2023

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3. Failing to respond”: black graduate students' perceptions of a university president's responses to racialized incidents;Journal of Diversity in Higher Education,2022

4. Faculty experiences of the impostor phenomenon in STEM fields;CBE-Life Sciences Education,2022

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