
Flourish
July 2005
vol. 1, no. 5
It seems to be a
truth commonly accepted in academic circles that summer
is infinite. One may travel for weeks, get up at noon and
watch day-time TV, have a succession of visitors who all
insist on going to the local theme park, and perfect one's
downward dog, and that's all doable because summer is a
big block of time and you can get everything done. So, let
me suggest something shocking: summer is not infinite. I'm
not trying to panic you, but there are only so many Mondays
until the fall term begins. For some of us that's fourteen
Mondays, for others it is already down to seven or eight.
As of last week, the hours of daylight have been getting
shorter. If you are going to use this summer wisely, you
cannot think of it as a big block of time in which writing
will somehow get done. You must have a plan. If you haven't
been writing much, start small. Start with fifteen minutes
a day. Whatever you do, don't wait. It won't always be easy,
but the longer you keep at it, the easier it will become.
Writing in regular sessions of moderate length works. Waiting
until September won't.
Stories from the
Writing Life
“A rabbit is sunning
himself outside his house when a fox comes along and tells
him that he is going to eat him for lunch. The rabbit explains,
rather smugly, that the fox cannot eat him because he is
working on his dissertation, the subject of which is the
superiority of rabbits over foxes and wolves. The fox laughs,
but the rabbit persuades him to come into his house and
examine his dissertation with the understanding that if
the fox did not agree that the title was correct, he could
eat the rabbit for lunch. The fox follows the rabbit into
the house and never emerges.
“A few hours later,
the rabbit is out sunning himself again when a wolf comes
by. The above scene repeats itself with the same result.
“Later in the afternoon
the rabbit is outside again when a squirrel comes by and
comments on the satisfied look on the rabbit's face. The
rabbit explains that he is indeed satisfied because he has
just completed his dissertation on the superiority of rabbits
over foxes and wolves. The squirrel is skeptical, but agrees
to follow the rabbit into his house to examine his dissertation.
“In the house is
a computer on which appears the completed dissertation.
On the floor on one side of the room are the bones of a
fox. On the other side, the bones of a wolf. In the corner
sits a lion.
“The rabbit smiles
and says to the squirrel, ‘You know, it doesn't really matter
what your research topic is, as long as you have the right
advisor.'”
Anonymous message
on the internet, cited in Richard M. Reis, Tomorrow's
Professor: Preparing for Academic Careers in Science and
Engineering (New York: Institute of Electrical
and Electronics Engineers, Inc., 1997), 118-19.
Exercising the Writing
Muscle
One of the best
things you can do for your writing is to commit to spending
an afternoon a week (or a month) at the library reading
the journals in your field. Not only will it keep you up-to-date
on the research and enable you to have more interesting
(impressive?) conversations with those in your field, but
it can improve your writing for publication. Many swear
by this policy. If you need a task, you can examine the
first paragraphs of four articles in journals you admire.
See if you can identify how those first paragraphs are working.
That is, how are the authors presenting their content? What
do they start with? How much information are you the reader
given? If you walked away after reading nothing but the
first paragraph, what would you know about the article?
Think carefully about how the authors are approaching their
audiences and what that means for how you could better approach
yours.
News from the Editor
It's been a busy
month here, getting ready to teach the ten-week workshop
at UCLA to graduate students in the humanities and social
sciences. I always try to use the month before class starts
to write another section of The Graduate Student and Junior
Faculty Guide to Writing the Academic Article: A Step-by-Step
Workbook for Sending Your Paper to a Journal in Twelve Weeks.
On the recommendations of some of those who used the workbook
last summer, I broke up the long first chapter and have
added a daily task list for each week. I also worked on
the literature review chapter. I now have a good three-quarters
of the book done, which is great. Now, on to other writing
projects!