I was excited
when Matt invited me to be a part of Modern
Medieval, and I promptly promised myself to write weekly posts…back in
February. And here we are, mid-May, and
I am just now putting up my first post.
Of course, in making plans and failing to meet them I join a very fine
and long academic tradition of optimism, denial/delusion, and overworking. I
decided to start off my first post with this wee-bit of self-flagellation
(another thing some Academics are good at), though, because I want to focus for
a moment on the first term in the little trio I listed: optimism.
The beginning of
summer is a time to be optimistic. For many of us, the semester is over and we
now have time, time, to do some real
work. I’m also at a moment in my career that, theoretically, could engender
optimism. As Matt noted many moons ago when he introduced me, I have just
started a Postdoctoral position at Tulane.
I feel immensely fortunate to have this position, especially given the
realities of the job market, and I feel even more fortunate that, for the first
time in several years, I do not need to do summer teaching (on top of other odd
academic jobs) in order to pay my rent.
I often love the intensity of summer courses, but as I’ve found, they
can leave little time and energy for researching and writing.
With such a
novel summer in front of me, I was really struck by Jenn Jordan’s “Summertime and the Living is Moderately Easy”. At
the end of her post she asks: “Whether graduate
student, adjunct, post-doc or tenure-track professor, how do you like to spend
your summers? How do you balance the need to recuperate from the school
year while also developing your ideas and pushing your work forward?” For
me, the real tension is between my initial optimism—a summer full of
potential—and the pressing realities of the need to recover, of travel
obligations, and of the need to do all the things I ignored during the
semester. Glorious summer can quickly turn into discontent (groan, I know) as
the optimism I began it with quickly gets buried by so much reality.
I don’t, yet,
have much of an answer for Jenn since I’m still new to this, and so I need to
figure it out. For now, I want to try to
hold onto my optimism for a bit longer than I typically have done. By this I don’t mean any sort of self-help
actualizing business, but rather I’m trying to rethink how I orient myself
toward the temporality of “summer”, and toward academic work in general. During
grad school, my sense of time was ultimately teleological (and perhaps
apocalyptic). The goal of the
dissertation subordinated everything to itself—every piece of work I did should
form into a chapter, and finally, a finished dissertation that is defended at a
specific point in time. This mindset bred a utilitarian approach to my work,
and I constantly had the telos of the
finished dissertation propelling me forward. I was like a Joseph Campbell hero
(but not really) with a defined quest, including many interlocked subquests, which
needed to be achieved.
At this stage of
my career, or at least for the summer, I want to replace this sort of
monomythic temporality with one inspired more by aventure. Like a
knight-errant (and surely making many errors and wanderings along the way), I
want to see where the summer takes me. I
want to experience the temporality of this summer as something more open-ended
and full of potential, and not impose upon myself a strict set of teleological
goals. (As I write this, I am tempted to
make some connections to the many conversations surrounding the dissertation
and the monograph—are they still the rightful endpoints of scholarly work or
are they archaic and limiting? I’ll leave that for another blog post, or more
likely, leave it to others.) Right now,
I am feeling the need to be intellectually peripatetic, at least for a while. I want to be on the move—I just don’t know
exactly yet where I’m going.
The trick will
be to make this into a productive venture, and not let it be an excuse to
meander. And, of course, I cannot (nor
would I want to) avoid the discrete goals with specific limits and deadlines
that I have already laid out. Here are
the tasks I want to accomplish this summer:
- I want to send off a revised chapter of my dissertation as a journal article (on St. Erkenwald, the pagan judge’s missing name, and the making and unmaking of history)
- I am giving a paper at NCS in July on Sir Gawain and the Green Knight as part of a panel on the Neighbor.
These are my two
main, definable goals for the summer, and I expect to be blogging about both in
the coming weeks and months. At the
moment, though, I am trying to be open to where these two projects will take
me. I want to treat them as way-points
or beginnings, not final destinations. Will the
NCS paper turn into an article? Or be a cornerstone of my first book? Will the Erkenwald article be part of that first
book project or will I treat it as the last hurrah of the dissertation?
I’m trying to be
ok with not knowing for now. In this way I hope to remain optimistic.
1 comment:
Well, I can tell you that "postmedieval" would like to see that Sir Erkenwald essay, and also: it will be great to see you at the NCS meeting in Portland.
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