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How to be happy: a sociologist's view of #HEhappiness

What brings joy? This week, as part of our week of articles on #HEhappiness, academics from five disciplines address this most difficult of questions

Published on
October 3, 2017
Last updated
October 5, 2017
Statue covered in pigeons
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In August, a report by Rand Europe听confirmed what many had long suspected: that academics face a greater mental health risk than the population at large.

This week, academics from five disciplines ranging from philosophy to neuroscience share their insights into how the search for happiness should be conducted 鈥 if it should be conducted at all.听We will publish one a day from 2-4 October.听

Available now: the full #HEhappiness feature, including all the individual perspectives (including the one below)

Sociology

David Bartram, associate professor in sociology at the听University of Leicester听and co-editor of the听Journal of Happiness Studies.

Are you happy being an academic? Some people find that question hard to answer. I don鈥檛. I love my life as a teacher and researcher. And while my own happiness is not the only important question about my career, it does matter, to me 鈥 and why shouldn鈥檛 it?

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But happiness is a controversial notion, especially among sociologists. Some people think of happiness expectations as oppressive, or at least as neoliberal 鈥渞esponsibilisation鈥 (the transfer of responsibility for resolving problems from institutions to individuals). And much of the research is based on quantitative analysis; one might indeed be troubled by seeing happiness reduced to a single response on a survey questionnaire (although I do it in my own research exploring whether migration results in greater happiness for migrants).

More to the point: it probably seems intuitively obvious that if we want to improve happiness, what鈥檚 needed is to deal with poor and deteriorating work conditions. Autonomy reinforces happiness, especially at work; powerlessness undermines it. So reviving professional autonomy in research and in the classroom is surely a necessity for any institution that claims to care about its employees鈥 well-being. Ending salary erosion might help, too.

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The problem is, there鈥檚 virtually no chance of reshaping Western universities in ways that would genuinely support employees鈥 happiness. Institutional leaders all pay lip service to it, but the narrow limits are all too apparent. No one is going to restore faculty governance to make academics happier.


Also in this series

A neuroscientist's view of #HEhappiness
A听psychologist's view of HE happiness


The things that universities do in the name of staff well-being are, by contrast, sometimes downright cringe-worthy. One institution (I鈥檒l name it privately if you write to ask) recently held an event featuring smoothie-making, yoga stretching, herbal-tea drinking and personal development reading. It鈥檚 beyond parody, and it gives well-being a bad name, especially among critically minded people.

So do happiness studies have anything to offer? Yes 鈥 but you might not like it. For people who already enjoy relatively favourable circumstances (and let鈥檚 face it, that includes most of us), one way to reinforce happiness is to moderate your expectations. For instance, aspiring to change one鈥檚 circumstances can end in disappointment even when the aspiration is achieved. That鈥檚 one way to make sense of the idea that 鈥渕oney doesn鈥檛 buy happiness鈥. If you really want more money, you鈥檙e probably making invidious comparisons with others who earn more than you do 鈥 and you鈥檒l likely continue doing this even if you get a pay rise. That way of thinking (and its consequences) surely extends beyond money.

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Now, findings of that sort are exactly what lead some people to perceive happiness studies as having limited value. It sounds like a road to resignation and fatalism. It takes pressure off those who wield power, suggesting that the path to happiness is in no small measure a private one. There鈥檚 some affinity here with venerable religious perspectives (especially Buddhism), but that is likely to be small consolation to mostly secular academics.

I genuinely don鈥檛 mean to preach a doctrine of resignation. Even on grounds of happiness, we should continue to fight for the restoration of faculty governance and respect for professional judgement. (What else are they paying us for?) And there are other reasons to work for social change, at work and elsewhere: happiness is not the only form of the 鈥済ood life鈥.


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However, private seething doesn鈥檛 strike me as a necessary or beneficial component of a social change agenda. Public seething is useful, perhaps 鈥 but best to deploy it as a strategy, a performance, rather than letting it become who you are.

A final thought: the path to happiness is sometimes an indirect one; the single-minded pursuit of it can be self-defeating. Some authors, such as Svend Brinkmann in his recent polemic,听Stand Firm: Resisting the Self-Improvement Craze, urge us to ignore our own happiness and do the right thing. But these options might be more complementary than contradictory. Doing the right thing can contribute to personal happiness.

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So be generous with your students, even if you think they鈥檙e uninterested and callow. You can鈥檛 know your eventual impact on them, and you can likely get satisfaction for yourself by offering them more than you think they deserve.

The full HE happiness feature听has now been published.

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