[This past
weekend, the Northeast MLA held
its annual spring
conference in Toronto. I was there in my official capacity as the
organization’s Vice President, as well as a presenter and audience member, and
wanted to follow up on a handful of the many interesting things that took
place. Leading up to a weekend post on how you can help me plan next year’s
conference in Hartford!]
Three great
pieces of advice from the roundtable “Strategies for Becoming a Prolific Writer,”
at which I presented alongside Anna Strowe, Felipe
Ruan, and Simona
Wright:
1)
Interdisciplinarity: It will come as no surprise
to readers of this blog that I made the case for thinking of and developing our
work in interdisciplinary ways, but others on the panel (and in the audience)
advanced elements of the same idea. For one thing, such thinking allows us to
imagine connections, audiences, and avenues for our work that would be closed
off if we defined ourselves in overly narrow or specialized ways. And for
another, as I argued at the roundtable in response to a question about job
market dangers of interdisciplinarity, increasingly institutions need faculty
who can teach multiple things, wear multiple hats, extend their work in a
variety of directions. All reasons to practice interdisciplinarity, I’d say!
2)
Rhizomatic Thinking: Simona specifically made
the case for thinking of our scholarly work and identity in a rhizomatic way, with roots and branches
that extend in multiple directions. This is partly another way of putting the
interdisciplinary emphasis, but it would be possible and important to aim for
rhizomatic thinking even within one discipline (or even a more specialized
focus within one, on for example one specific author). Audience member Mark Fulk made a
similar point, about the way that unexpected connections between our focus at
any given moment and other ideas/subjects often prompts our writing and
projects. And we can’t see such connections, much less pursue them, if we
aren’t open to the rhizomatic approach Simona emphasized.
3)
Pleasure: All of the presenters made the case,
in one way or another, for writing about what interests us, what we’re
passionate about, what gives us pleasure. This might seem to be a given, but I
don’t believe it is—too often, academic or scholarly writing reads and feels
like a chore, to the author as well as the reader. The dissertation process
itself seems geared in many ways to producing precisely such writing. Perhaps
we can’t change the dissertation process (although we
can and should consider it), but we can certainly redefine academic writing
more broadly as something that should be interesting and pleasurable, to the
author and then (and thus) to its readers.
All things I’ll
bring with me into my ongoing and future writing for sure! Next recap tomorrow,
Ben
PS. Were you at
NeMLA 2015? I’d love to hear your follow ups as well—or your thoughts on this
post even if you weren’t there!
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