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Blogging and Academics?

March 12, 2010

I am of at least two minds about my life as a wanna-be academic and a Vox-Nova contributor. The most practical question is whether I should include my Vox-Nova writing on my CV. There are those who insist that I should include it (along with my music, in some minds). There are others who wish I would stop writing here altogether, or at least keep it as hidden as possible.

The truth is, if adding Vox-Nova to my CV will produce a job, then, I’d include it. If not, then, the converse.

The next question I come across is this: Where I should publish what? I often avoid publishing book reviews here, for example, because they take a long time and I prefer to publish them elsewhere. I want to make them “count.” On the other hand, there are things I have written here that mean more to me than anything I have published in peer-reviewed journals.

Recently, I had a paper that I have presented in two different places rejected for publication, twice. I like the paper because it is different from some of my other writing. Strangely enough, it is a direct—verbatim in some cases—outgrowth of some of my writing here at Vox-Nova.

Some of my colleagues like the paper very much, but even they admit that it is probably too wild for academia. The most generous reviewers gave it a thumbs-up for insight and questions raised, but a thumbs-down for not seeing the argument to the bitter end. And they are mostly right. As I see it, the role of journals is to pollinate the minds of others with insights and questions, as long as they are not less than half-baked and come out with style and verve.

What non-blog-savvy academics don’t know is this: People actually read this stuff! Not just a few insular specialists, but people from all over the place. Even some who get here by sheer accident.

Now, having an audience is never a good reason to write, or do anything else I can think of, all on its own. But, it seems to me, that as far as the purposes of being an intellectual go, if an academic wants to have an effect in the world, then, blogging might be as worldly as it gets.

This, of course, is its greatest weakness too. But, to those who dismiss blogs altogether, think of this: Most people are reading/watching popular magazines or television. At least here at Vox-Nova, and many other places too, one of these things is not like the other.

My academic hero, William James, mostly wrote book reviews and letters-to-the-editor. (Many times he did so under the pseudonym, Ignoramus.) Most of his books were originally popular lectures given before crowds of all types. He shared Tolstoy’s admiration for the rugged worker, the person of the earth.

I know that I will never have the effect of either of those two intellectual giants, but, in the meantime, I have come to these two beliefs about the topic at hand:

1.) My academic profile, my CV, my “academic homepage”—my identity as a wanna-be-academic, a man of leisure—all of this is purely instrumental, like the money it gives or withholds from me and my family. I can be an intellectual with or without it. As undesirable as that may seem right now.

2.) My truest desire is to cultivate a life that might learn from and teach others how to exist as a human person, in the deepest and truest sense, using whatever I have to offer—be it overrated credibility from years of study, publication in a journal or at a blog, honest conversation over a beer or four, or the gut-wrenching discipline of silence.

Because of these beliefs, I now have two kinds of CV; one with and the other without Vox-Nova. (I still am unconvinced that music should be included at all.) Also, I am going to publish my much-maligned paper here in the weeks to come as a four-part series. Sad as it is on some levels, it will likely be read more here than there anyway.

5 Comments
  1. Navy Vet permalink
    March 13, 2010 1:23 am

    Thanks for the insight into your motivations for blogging and sharing your ideas with the larger world.

    One thought for the day – this site attracts many people who do not read your other media outlets, so this is your one shot to reach this audience. We come here for both insight and entertainment from a diverse group. This truly is the highest sort of diversity also. No one knows anything about anyone else except the insight and power of our thoughts. Everyone is judged by the content of their character.

    Should you include your work on Vox-Nova on your CV? That depends on why you are sharing your CV with them. Your CV is a snapshot of yourself, so choose the snapshot that will portray the face that you want them to see.

    But on behalf of the relatively anonymous group of commenters, thank you for sharing as much of yourself as you do, and I look forward to reading your work for as long as you continue to share.

  2. Ronald King permalink
    March 13, 2010 8:30 am

    Sam, This note is from somebody who is nobody to everybody outside the intimacy of family and friends but wanted to be a somebody for the Pittsburgh Pirates back in the ’60′s which would make this nobody a somebody to other nobodies(sp?) who would then become a vicarious somebody to a limited number of nobodies. Alas, 5’8″ and 135#’s, low 80′s fastball and no control kept me as a nobody.
    Sam, share everything you have everywhere you are and do not let the rigidity of others limit where you express yourself.
    Hell, start your own publication.
    You can call it Insights from Nobody!

  3. Rodak permalink
    March 13, 2010 11:17 am

    I’m not convinced that a CV is the best place to mention one’s participation on a blog. The world being what it is, things written by others–never mind what you’ve posted yourself–might damage your chances at landing some positions.
    I would say that a better place to mention blogging would be in your cover letters to selected employers by whom such writing activities would almost certainly to be regarded as an asset.
    That said, it’s fairly likely, if you blog using your real name, that persons on search committees by which your CV is being considered will find the blog using Google, or some other search engine, anyway. But why save them the trouble?

  4. March 13, 2010 11:21 am

    Sam, thanks for this. I’ve been thinking along these lines as well.

  5. March 14, 2010 2:11 am

    That said, I have not put any of my blogging on my CV.

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