Abstract
This qualitative study investigates how graduate students engage with academic conferences as sites for professional development and identity construction. Grounded in academic socialization theory and employing an interpretive phenomenological approach, we conducted semi-structured interviews with 18 graduate students across diverse disciplinary fields in China. Reflexive thematic analysis revealed four distinct participation orientations: knowledge-seeking, competence-building, network-oriented, and identity-exploratory. Our findings illuminate how contemporary academic environments characterized by heightened competition, publish-or-perish pressures, and quantified evaluation systems create conditions of academic alienation, manifesting as disconnection from scholarly work, superficial collegial interactions, and weakened community belonging. Significantly, we identified conference participation as a transformative mechanism through which students counteract alienation by reclaiming meaning in scholarly labor, cultivating authentic academic dialogue, and reconstructing professional community ties. We propose an integrative conceptual framework illustrating the dynamic relationships among alienation, participation orientations, and transformative outcomes. These findings advance the theoretical understanding of academic socialization as an agentic, iterative process and offer practical implications for institutions, faculty advisors, and students seeking to support graduate student development in increasingly pressurized academic climates.