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Academic bullying is hidden in plain sight

Tormented by playground thugs as a child, Jonathan Taylor reflects on why the insidious bullying found in universities is similar but much worse

Published on
August 29, 2024
Last updated
September 6, 2024
Montage of two children bullying a child in a school setting with smash glass effect to illustrate Academic bullying is hidden in plain sight
Source: GettyImages/istock montage

It鈥檚 November 1983. I鈥檓 in the final year of primary school. It鈥檚 playtime and I鈥檓 alone, hiding in the wasteland behind one of the school鈥檚 mobile huts. The hut鈥檚 painted a similar green to my school sweatshirt, so I鈥檓 hoping I鈥檓 camouflaged, like the chameleons we鈥檝e been studying in class. I鈥檓 hoping I鈥檓 safe.

I鈥檓 not: two minutes later, my arch-nemesis Lee Hardwick (not his real name) sidles round one side of the building, his three sidekicks round the other. I鈥檓 cornered.

鈥淒on鈥檛 be scared,鈥 says Lee. 鈥淲e only want a little chat with you.鈥 He seems reasonable, placatory: 鈥淚鈥檓 not that bad, you know. But you and me, we never seem to get on. I dunno why.鈥

鈥淵ou鈥檙e bullying me,鈥 I say. Lee snorts: 鈥淒on鈥檛 be silly. I鈥檓 not a bully.鈥

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Bullying always erases itself, effaces its own existence. No one openly admits to being a bully 鈥 at least, not while it鈥檚 happening. Bullying exists only in denial (鈥I didn鈥檛 do nuffin, miss鈥). This self-erasure is one of its hallmarks and I can鈥檛 help feeling it should be part of any definition.

Definitions of bullying generally mention 鈥減ower imbalance鈥 between perpetrator and 鈥渧ictim鈥. Yet most forms of power like to proclaim themselves 鈥 either through display, public self-assertion or institutional recognition. Bullying, by contrast, is usually a private matter between bullies, sidekicks, victims and (where relevant) bystanders 鈥 something that happens behind mobile huts. Even when the results of it involve the victim鈥檚 public humiliation, or general awe at the bully鈥檚 dominance, the means by which these ends are achieved must be kept under wraps.

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Indeed, bullying can sometimes go to great lengths in self-concealment, radiating the blame outwards, such that it becomes the victim鈥檚 own fault that they are being victimised.

In 1983, Lee Hardwick already understands this: 鈥淵ou know,鈥 he says, 鈥渢hings could be different between us, Taylor. You don鈥檛 have to treat me as your enemy. I dunno what your problem is. You take everything too seriously. If you wanted, we could be friends. I tell y鈥檞hat, let鈥檚 shake on it 鈥 no more aggro.鈥 He holds out his hand. I take it.

He pulls me towards him, as though to embrace me 鈥 then trips me up, pushes me to the ground. While he watches, his sidekicks pile on top of me, one pinning my arms down, one holding my feet, one sitting on my legs. The last pulls down my trousers while I try to writhe free.

鈥淒on鈥檛 worry,鈥 says one. 鈥淲e鈥檙e only, like, doing to you what the headmaster does to kids every day, with his cane or whatever.鈥

鈥淎nd you love that sort of thing, don鈥檛 you, Taylor? 鈥 like a girl or ballerina or poofter would.鈥

鈥淵eah, and you know what boys do to girls,鈥 says Lee.

鈥淲丑补迟?鈥

鈥淭丑别测 rape 迟丑别尘.鈥

鈥淵eah! Let鈥檚 do a rape!鈥

I鈥檓 scared: 鈥Please鈥︹赌

Given what happens in the next couple of minutes, it鈥檚 clear in retrospect that my tormentors have, as of yet, an imperfect grasp of what the R-word signifies. We鈥檙e still at an early stage of learning the language of sex, gender and violence, picking up half-comprehended words from brothers, parents, TV.

Bullying is always a linguistic phenomenon as well as a physical one, and usually the linguistic element is primary, physical violence only the enactment of insults, promises and threats. So an inadequate grasp of language can sometimes alleviate its worst excesses.

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In this instance, my bullies鈥 imperfect comprehension of the terms they use saves me from something a lot worse than what actually happens. When the boys get bored, throw me my trousers and run off, I鈥檓 left with bruises, grazes and furious tears 鈥 but that鈥檚 all. Thank God.

Bullies, though, eventually grow up. While, statistically speaking, many leave bullying behind as they get older, some learn to use language much more precisely, weaponising it in ways that Lee Hardwick and his sidekicks could never have dreamed of. In my own experience, at least, it鈥檚 been highly educated and articulate adults 鈥 not children, not nightclub bouncers 鈥 who are the most adept bullies, due to their sophisticated command of language. That鈥檚 why university academics can be such superlative bullies. In effect, they have PhDs in it, while kids like Lee Hardwick haven鈥檛 even passed their GCSEs yet.

The bullying I experienced as a kid was relatively straightforward (鈥You鈥檙e a poof, Taylor.鈥 *Punch*). The bullies in my school were big, lumbering beasts, who weren鈥檛 interested in developing complex linguistic frameworks for what they were doing, beyond common epithets (鈥減oofter鈥, 鈥渜ueer鈥, 鈥渂allerina鈥), let alone long-term strategies.

So I was by no means prepared for the kind of brutal psychological bullying I came across some decades later, as an 鈥渆arly-career academic鈥. Coming from a middle-of-the-road Stoke comprehensive, the sophisticated bullying I experienced from my then-line manager in my then-university was wholly alien to me. Here was a new mode of bullying which involved no overt physical violence 鈥 just strategies, bureaucratic terrorism, linguistic traps, carefully laid.

Still, there were strange, hidden connections between school and university forms of bullying, which only became clear in retrospect. For a start, the apparent separation of physical from psychological violence is never absolute. Bullying is always a compound of both, even when one element appears absent. Physical violence is never entirely absent from workplace bullying, even when it remains concealed, offstage. The physical aspects of bullying still haunt the violent language used (鈥渇iring鈥, 鈥渟acking鈥, etc), as well as the threats implied by that language (the potential deprivation resulting from being 鈥渇ired鈥, etc). And then there are the devastating physical and psychological effects of being bullied: stress-related illnesses, depression, PTSD and, in the worst cases, suicide.

For the most part, though, physical violence operates underground in workplace bullying, as its unconscious. Hence, the problem with describing my experience of bullying at university is that it lacks much overt drama: if one of the defining characteristics of bullying is self-erasure, intelligent adults become ever more brilliant at hiding what they are doing, usually in their victims鈥 minds.

It鈥檚 relatively easy to describe my behind-the-mobile-hut-confrontation with Lee. But adult bullying is often internalised, near-invisible and also immensely dull 鈥 a covert, day-in, day-out process of psychological erosion, of bureaucratic tides coming in and out.

The dullness can actually form part of the bullying. In any bureaucracy, the person who has most patience, who鈥檚 able to sustain petty schemes over long periods, is going to come out on top. It鈥檚 a matter of survival of the most officious.

But that sort of dogged persistence doesn鈥檛 necessarily make for a good story. It鈥檚 part of what makes psychological bullying, as opposed to someone punching someone else in the face, so hard to identify and tackle. Primarily inward-looking, there鈥檚 not much to point to that鈥檚 tangible, no obvious spectacle to gawp at. It certainly doesn鈥檛 make for a Hollywood blockbuster: Taylor v the Professor, now in 3D. Where Paper Cuts Get Personal.

No: for the most part, the bullying I experienced in听an early university job was insidious, subtle and too complexly boring 鈥 a matter of details within details, a sort of bureaucratic fractal 鈥 to recount in full. Sometimes, halfway through explaining a particular incident to a friend in the pub, I鈥檇 find myself trailing off, bored by the intricacy of my own lecture-theatre horror story.

Montage of man comforting a teenager as the bullying continues as he gets older
厂辞耻谤肠别:听
Getty Images/istock montage

By and large, stories about work life shy away from the maddening minutiae of admin, the purgatory of paperwork, the low-level terrorism of day-to-day management. This is one reason why I鈥檓 suspicious of campus novels: they usually substitute sensational (and interchangeable) stories of murders, affairs, drugs, for the everyday banality of university evil, the red-tape nightmares populated by committees, senior management committees and unofficial, behind-closed-doors gossip committees.

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They ignore the disciplinary hearings, secret disciplinary hearings, spreadsheets, regulations, spreadsheets of regulations, league tables, student feedback, fabricated student feedback, complaints, drummed-up complaints, spreadsheets of complaints and committees of drummed-up complaints.

And, above all, there is no mention of emails, emails, emails: hundreds, thousands of them, full of unnecessary or impossible jobs 鈥 emails telling you off for not doing said unnecessary or impossible jobs 鈥 emails undermining you in front of others 鈥 emails magnifying minor failures 鈥 or emails damning with faint or ambivalent praise.听Those emails sent on Monday mornings, to upset you at the start of the week 鈥 emails sent on Friday afternoons, so you dwell on them all weekend. Emails, emails, emails incessantly scything to and fro above you, like a razor-sharp pendulum, looming closer and closer鈥

In the tale by Edgar Allan Poe that famously depicts such a torture device (a scything pendulum, that is, not email), the reader hardly glimpses the torturers themselves. For all but the opening of the story, the Holy Inquisitors remain offstage, operating the torture machinery from afar. This is what technology of many kinds 鈥 from inquisitorial pendulums to institutional email to X/Twitter to academic acronyms 鈥 facilitates: for torture to be inflicted remotely, for the torturers to remain invisible.

Of course, the beauty of 鈥渃yber-bullying鈥 and 鈥渢rolling鈥 is that the torturers can disown their own torture devices: It wasn鈥檛 me, guv鈥檔or. I didn鈥檛 do nothing. Perhaps it wasn鈥檛 anyone. Perhaps it was the victim themselves crying 鈥淲olf!鈥 Remote bullying can efface itself,听X accounts can be anonymised, passive-aggressive emails reinterpreted (Of course I didn鈥檛 mean that) 鈥 to the extent that the victims themselves come to be suspected of paranoia: There鈥檚 no one there, there鈥檚 nothing wrong, it鈥檚 all in your head, stop imagining things, stop attacking yourself.

At worst, the people expressing such concerns onstage turn out to be the very same torturers who are invisibly operating the technology behind the scenes: What a shame, you need help, don鈥檛 worry, we鈥檒l take care of you. Very, very good care.

That鈥檚 because one of the paradoxical signs of bullying, in my limited experience, is kindness. Beware academic mentors, people who wear their pastoral skills on their sleeves: to care for someone, to take them under your wing, is to exercise a dangerous power. If nothing else, it imposes a debt of gratitude upon them. It also has the added benefit of muddying the waters when it comes to complaints, tribunals, solicitors. The bully can point to moments of kindness (carefully recorded, of course) that seem to undermine the complainant鈥檚 claims: But look how nice I was on this and that occasion.

This sort of weaponised kindness can be deployed remotely, too. One of the times I came closest to losing my mind, under the shadow of my professorial bully, was when a mature student told me, as if spontaneously, that my boss cared for me, that听they were concerned about my mental well-being, that听they really liked me and wished I liked听them back. I went away thinking: Oh, perhaps I鈥檝e been unfair to them. Perhaps I was wrong all along. Perhaps it鈥檚 all been in my head.

Rationally speaking, I knew it wasn鈥檛. There鈥檇 been too many rows for me to have imagined everything. But the cognitive dissonance introduced by the student鈥檚 words, and other strange moments of kindness from my bully (鈥淚 can help you with that鈥, 鈥淚 so enjoy working with you, Jonathan鈥, 鈥淲e鈥檙e such a friendly team here, aren鈥檛 we?鈥), induced a terrible vertigo.

Looking back on it now, I believe 鈥 rightly or wrongly 鈥 that the student in question was primed, and the strange nuggets of kindness among the bullying were mines, deliberately laid.

This was non-linear warfare, kindness-as-sadism, where part of the strategy is to playfully gaslight your enemy. Author Rachel Vail calls this 鈥subtle bullying鈥,听an incongruous type of bullying 鈥渢hat comes with compliments and praise鈥ppreciation [and]鈥ind words鈥, along with 鈥渕anipulation [and]鈥buse鈥. Adult bullying is rarely if ever monolithic, and incongruity can be one of its most powerful weapons, driving the victim round the bend: It鈥檚 them听鈥 No, it鈥檚 me听鈥 No, it鈥檚 them听鈥 But they're being kind 听鈥 No they're not, they're being ghastly 鈥 But they say they're being reasonable鈥

It reminds me of Lee Hardwick reasonably suggesting, 鈥淲e can be friends鈥 and 鈥淟et鈥檚 shake on it鈥, seconds before attacking me, pinning me down.

Lee was an amateur, though, compared听with my long-ago-boss at my long-ago-university.听They seemed to plan years ahead, laying bureaucratic mines that could blow up in your face on the Last Day of Judgement. It took me almost that long to overcome my callow bewilderment, to comprehend what was happening. Vail says something similar about her own experience of subtle bullying: 鈥淚t certainly never occurred to me that I was being bullied. I thought I was happy, or should be鈥ut I wasn鈥檛 happy. I was a wreck. I was being manipulated with kind words, bullied in such a subtle way the only bruises were invisible to me.鈥

This is the false consciousness of psychological bullying: that victims are unaware (or deliberately kept unaware) they are being bullied, sometimes until long afterwards. Bullying can conceal itself from the victim, as well as from the environment in which it operates. As anti-bullying activist says, 鈥溾楴ot recognising what is happening鈥 is one of the main reasons that people put up with bullying for so long.鈥

One reason why the victim may not be able to recognise or name what鈥檚 happening to them is that they鈥檙e denied access to the very word 鈥渂ullying鈥. When I finally lodged a formal complaint against my bully, I was told I wasn鈥檛 allowed to use the word 鈥渂ullying鈥 in my statement to the university. I had to use other, supposedly less loaded terms, instead.

As I鈥檝e suggested, bullying is often predicated on a linguistic hierarchy 鈥 on who wields greater command of particular kinds of language. And this linguistic hierarchy might involve who commands the very word 鈥渂ullying鈥, its meaning and definition: No, of course we鈥檙e not bullying you, don鈥檛 be silly, we鈥檙e just horsing around. Don鈥檛 you have a sense of humour?听Or: No, of course we鈥檙e not bullying you, we鈥檙e concerned about you and your mental health. Or: No, of course we鈥檙e not bullying you. If you look at Regulation 3.5.12 you鈥檒l see that you鈥檙e in the wrong, not us. Or: No, of course this isn鈥檛 bullying, it鈥檚 just a matter of exercising our legitimate authority. We鈥檙e higher up the university hierarchy than you, and we say this is discipline, not bullying.

And there鈥檚 the rub: sophisticated non-linear bullying frequently conceals itself by using the language of institutional discipline. In any educational institution, 鈥渋llegitimate鈥 bullying is always in danger of collapsing into 鈥渓egitimate鈥 (so-called) hierarchical discipline. This is bullying鈥檚 ultimate strategy of self-erasure: the weaponisation of the institution鈥檚 own language of power.

In other words, the languages of discipline and bullying can all too easily get mixed up, and the very cleverest bullies know this. So the best hiding place for a bully is not behind a mobile hut, but within the very disciplinary system that is supposed to deal with them.

I was repeatedly threatened with disciplinary action by my professorial bully, to which my only recourse was to appeal to the same disciplinary system that was being used against me. To no one鈥檚 surprise but my own, it didn鈥檛 work: my bully鈥檚 command of institutional language far outstripped mine.

鈥淲e鈥檙e only doing to you what the headmaster does to kids every day,鈥 Lee Hardwick said to me, back in 1983. In nascent form, herein lies the secret of the most successful bullying: it can assume the colours 鈥 the physical and linguistic patterns 鈥 of the system in which it operates.

Camouflage can be the most subtle form of concealment, and bullies are usually far better chameleons than their victims.听

听is associate professor of creative writing at the University of Leicester. This article is based on extracts from his book , published by Goldsmiths Press next month.

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Reader's comments (8)

Academic administrators have HR departments, now euphemistically referred to as "People and Culture", previously 'Employee Services' (which were never about serving employees) which can provide managers with the tools to bully in a more sophisticated manner to avoid legal consequences.
To be honest this article reads a little bait, it鈥檚 creatively well written (as one might expect), but the job of an academic has changed and it鈥檚 no longer about just turning up. Admin processes are at times slightly complex and overlapping but we all have to learn, understand and do them. If you鈥檙e not doing that or refuse to then you鈥檙e part of the problem not the solution and you鈥檒l find managers setting up meetings to discuss why. It鈥檚 tiring to try and make things better in the difficult climate we鈥檙e in but trust me your 鈥榖ullying鈥 manager is facing harder ground to fight for contracts and also produce a vision than you doing your job. This article sounds like a distraction from the hard work needed and also a book plug that seems a little selfish.
https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/report-government-redressing-harm-misconduct-uk-higher-nicholas-rowe-t7cof/?trackingId=U69uiOEYQj%2BMHbRo%2B07SMw%3D%3D I have just submitted a report to UK Government concerning harm and abuse in UK higher education institutions, and its individual and economic impact. 'Bullying' is a hard concept to tackle in law, and many coldly assert that things are 'tough', competition is 'tough', expectations are naturally of the highest level, and if you can't 'perform', 'manage the environment' or 'cope', then modern academia is not for you. But 'bullying' is nothing to do with work expectations or firm performance management - it is malicious and unacceptable behaviour that results in wrecked careers, wrecked lives, and sometimes even death (I hope the nay-sayers have taken time to read the suicide reports of some of the students and academics who could no longer 'cope' with academia). The mental health statistics speak for themselves and are consistent worldwide. But when we look at the cost that malpractice brings - above individual harm on a grand scale, the economic costs of bullying are beyond the comprehension of those who try to explain it away. Bullying and mistreatment is culturally rife, with 31鈥43% of members of the academy experiencing bullying, 42鈥61% witnessing bullying, and 47% of bullying being carried out by superiors who are often protected by their institution. * 78% of researchers (187,527 researchers in the UK) may experience unkind and aggressive work conditions * 43-61% (>94,000 staff) may have direct experience of bullying, and >100,000 will have witnessed bullying, the majority (47.75%) perpetrated by superiors Victims of bulling and mistreatment who complain are most often forced out of their positions, and bullying and mistreatment is a common factor behind poor mental health: * 32.8% of HE students in the UK (928,240 students) may display poor mental health * 50% (1,415,000 students) may have thoughts of self-harm, and 8,968 may have plans for suicide * 53% of researchers (127,422 academic employees) in the UK may display poor mental health * 41% (42,904) of doctoral students may have diagnosable Moderate to Severe Anxiety * 39% (40,811) of doctoral students may have diagnosable Moderate to Severe Depression * 40% (41,858) of doctoral students run a high risk of committing suicide, with suicide increasingly common in UK universities Every one of these people is a real person ... * Undiagnosed anxiety and depression among all students could cost the UK a minimum of 拢232,060,000 * Undiagnosed anxiety and depression among doctoral students could cost the UK a minimum of 拢20,928,750 * Undiagnosed anxiety and depression among researchers could cost the UK a minimum of 拢31,855,500 Moderate-to-severe poor mental health is 10-times the incidence seen in the general global population, and appointed supervisors are attributable for 51%+ of the incidence of poor doctoral student mental health (analysing the data of the largest international study on post-graduate wellbeing). Middle-aged academics can be seen to be at a greater risk of suicide than young students in terms of age-related difference. Suicide in academia is only around 10% lower than seen in the highest work group (healthcare) in the UK. So I have nothing but contempt for those who claim nothing is wrong -- there are no 'two sides of the coin' when something like this has such devastating effects on this sort of scale. I hope that people will begin to see the human and economic reality of this sort of behaviour, and stop giving credence to those who try to justify what goes on - it is indefensible. This might bring about cultural change in the academy, and the 'dominance of the few' (which is oriented on power, entitlement, self-regard and money) is no different to the dynamics seen in the great socio-cultural upheavals that formed our present society. But when you do the maths and see how many have been harmed, then do not be surprised if people have enough, and some form of 'Me too' comes to a university near you ...
You can't get some people to see the facts if they don't want to. I really hope this blows up, and those perpetuating this kind of behaviour are named, shamed, and appropriately censured. Short-termist so-called professional managers are the bain of academia. Spineless, gutless, self-serving, backroom operators aided and abetted by even more short-termist failed academics turned managers.
I can't help noting the similarities with domestic abuse, which is of course a form of bullying. The victims often don't realise they are victims for years, and if there is an incident that is reported to law enforcement, they side with the bully, who is adept at explaining away their actions and gaslighting the victim. The system supports the perpetrator. A colleague of mine was bullied by her PhD supervisor to a horrendous degree. That same supervisor has bullied countless others, but continues to thrive and be promoted in and by the university.
This one of the first articles I have read about bullying that really gets at how it subtly operates. It's brilliant. I was saddened by the response of the reader who has no knowledge of your situation and nevertheless so easily took the side of the bully. To go a step further and call the article "selfish" is unbelievably cruel--a kind of abuse, really and yet a very familiar response (by people in majority groups) to the act of speaking up about abuse. Thank you for the piece and publishing it.
Thank you for this article. A lot of academics don't appear to have very high emotional IQs let alone GIQ so, unfortunately, acquisition of any form of power is a temptation to misuse it, especially if those you consider 'beneath' you are less dim! My academic career was pretty much extinguished due to bullying. It took years to recover any kind of self esteem or confidence. Now I'm retired though, I am super-vigilant and don't let anyone put me down! There's too much to live for. But it still hurts when I think of what happened and what a bitch my boss was and probably still is.
'Vertigo' arising from targeted 'kindness-as-sadism' so precisely captures my experience of this, thank you. It's been hard to find the concepts to reassure myself that I'm not crazy.

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