It has now been some months since I made great promises to go off to Morocco and think about a Sacred Sociology. As it happens, I did that. On a number of bus and train journeys across Southern Spain and down through Morocco to the foothills of the Atlas Mountains, I thought about what a Sacred Sociology for the twenty first century might look like. At some point I may even come back to it and write out some of my thoughts.
The issue was not the holiday, it was coming back, hitting the new term and never quite getting around to putting something down on the blog again. Time passed and it was already Christmas, the New Year, the new term and my life just seemed to be getting ever more busy. Then, last week, it was announced that I am to begin a new job in two months time, on the 1st May, as Pro-Vice Chancellor at the University of Swansea. That will no doubt be even busier than the current role, but it has given me an excuse to get back to the blog and, at least mentally, to make a commitment to keep it going through the transition and hopefully on into the new role itself.
One of the things that this does mean is that I can in fact begin to refocus the blog much more clearly on the four distinct strands that I began with (over two years ago?) which now make even more sense within the new role. It is the relationship between the strands of my quartet, and my own ability to see links and juxtapositions between them, that is going to make the new role particularly intellectually exciting for me.
First: there will be a commentary on the Higher Education scene more generally (perhaps seen from a distinctively Welsh perspective in the new role) but always, from my own point of view, with an eye on the international context. Much of what I do will be reflecting on policy, strategy and practice and as that is the day job the chance to comment more speculatively within the blog will be helpful. This will not, however, be a blow by blow commentary on the role of the PVC.
Second: what I called the 'post-post-modernism'. My role at Swansea will cover a number of different areas but at its core is an oversight of the research agenda for Arts, Humanities and the Social Sciences. I have always been keen to develop a much more integrated, interdisciplinary approach within these fields and the role at Swansea, engaging with some really top quality researchers across these disciplines, will, in part, give me an opportunity to explore this further. Whether the focus will be on complexity, post-post-modernism, or even the Sacred Sociology, this will be where, intellectually and practically, much of my thought will focus.
Third: the new role is not intended to be a research post, but I will, of course, continue to research and at the core of that will be the continuing development of my general theory of religion. This term I am really enjoying myself giving a series of lectures to our first year here in Birmingham on Myth. A colleague described the study of myth to me as the history of ideas over the last hundred and fifty years. The next book I write, after the Dogon text, will be on myth (volume four of the general theory) and much of what I read will be in this area so no doubt I will have some very interesting comments to make on this in passing.
Fourth: meanwhile I still have the Dogon book to complete and I am on target to complete the main draft by the end of the summer. I am really enjoying doing the research on that, reading in so many different fields that I had not even known to exist, discovering patterns and connections and that often just leave me speechless, and even enjoying wading through great early twentieth century tomes in French. It has been great fun and a real eye opener. Even when the book is completed, however, I will not be able to leave the Dogon alone, they are one of my real passions. And so, they will be the fourth string to my bow (as it were).
My aim is once a week, so let's see how I get on this time...
Monday, 2 March 2015
Monday, 4 August 2014
Towards a New 'Sacred Sociology'
I am currently working on the chapter of my most recent book
on the reception of the Dogon in the West that deals with the discourse within
the anthropological tradition and provides a critique of the anthropology of
the Dogon with reference to anthropological theory. As part of this I have been
looking at the intellectual roots of Marcell Griaule and others involved in the
research on the Dogon. This is focused on the intellectual scene in Paris in
the late 1920s through to the end of 1930s. In exploring more about this period
I came across Michele Richman’s work ‘Sacred Revolutions’. In this book Richman
outlines the thinking that came together in the short lived College de Sociologie
towards the end of the 1930s. The key players in the College were Georges
Bataille, Roger Callois and Michel Leiris (who was part of the first Griaule
Mission to the Dogon).
In talking about the College, Richman says: ‘Sociology thus
became an essential resource for the College’s investigation of the interface
between the social and the political as a key to understanding the nature of
collective movements’ (2002, 113) and a little later: ‘With its claim that
death is the underlying catalyst for movements of attraction as well as
repulsion, and that the need to mediate encounters with it prompts the
consecration of sacred places, persons or things, the College united under the
banner of a sacred sociology’ (2002,
114, italics in original). There is, of course, much more to Richman’s complex
and sophisticated analysis of this movement, but there are a number of things
that really appeal to me even in those two passages and that makes me want to
explore this whole movement further.
In the first passage the concern is with the ‘interface
between the social and the political’. That is essential in today’s world and
something that I personally find difficult to grasp. It is this interface,
Richman suggests, that is ‘a key to understanding the nature of collective
movements’. For those collective movements that really concern us today
(radical Islam and the like) this is undoubtedly true and while considerable
work has been done on collective movements, and the interface between the
social and the political, since the 1930s much of this has veered away from any
direct concern with religion. The second passage talks about death as the ‘underlying
catalyst’ and the need to mediate encounters with it through a greater
understanding of sacred places, persons and things. In the 1930s the College
had difficulty in engaging with the rise of Nazism and their solution, in part,
was to see this as a ‘sacred’ movement, or at least a movement that had
elements of the sacred within it. The contemporary movements can be seen very
clearly as ‘religious’, and we may or may not want to use the word ‘sacred’ to
describe them. Far less has been said about the centrality of the encounter
with death (in all its forms, not just suicide bombings) that sits at the heart
of such movements and, I would suggest, must sit at the heart of any analysis
of the movements or any attempts to counter them. It is this, Richman suggests,
that led the members of the College to ‘unite under a banner of a sacred
sociology’. Does this imply, therefore, that we might now need a new ‘sacred
sociology’ to counter the contemporary collective movements? I think that it
probably does.
I am just about to go off on another holiday, another tour
with long hours of bus and train travel, this time in Southern Spain and
Morocco. I want to use that time, in part, to reflect on what such a ‘sacred
sociology’ might look at (not as a parody of the theory of religion as with ‘metaphorics’)
but as a way of engaging with the real issues that we face as sociologists and
theorists of religion in the contemporary world. I am clear that Richman, and
the College, is not talking about a sociology of the sacred here, far less a
sociology of religion. I am also clear that they are not talking about a
religious sociology (as in Catholic or Islamic sociology) that is not in any
sense what I am talking about, although there may be something to learn from
these sources. The emphasis on the word ‘sacred’ with its roots in Durkheimian
sociology and its connection with ‘death’, the ‘collective’ and, later in
Richman’s analysis with the ‘erotic’ is where I think we need to begin.
Obviously to really begin to construct (or is it to ‘reconstruct’) a new sacred
sociology is going to demand much more reading, research, debate and
discussion. It cannot be put together, like a spoof theory, on a bus travelling
through the mountains of Morocco. I can, however, begin to think through the parameters,
the limits and the possible shape of such a sacred sociology. That, I really
believe, has to be my next task.
I will come back and report on how I have done (and also
attempt to bring together the various posts from the last few weeks) on my
return…
Monday, 28 July 2014
Being an Entrepreneurial Academic
In a newsfeed on Higher Education issues from the States
there was a recent series of blogs on academic entrepreneurship. It offered advice over
four weeks with suggested exercises in order to help readers get their own
particular ‘business’ off the ground. The section that particularly struck me
was on the differences between the academic and the entrepreneurial mindset. I
am not sure there was anything new here, but it was the way in which it was
laid out, so simply and so clearly, and the way the comparison was made with
the ‘academic mindset’ that particularly struck me. The author identified five elements
to the entrepreneurial mindset:
-
Academics move slow. Entrepreneurs move fast.
- Academics study problems. Entrepreneurs solve problems.
- Academics function in constraint. Entrepreneurs create possibility.
- Academics focus on patterns. Entrepreneurs focus on the exceptions.
- Academics loathe promotion. Entrepreneurs live to sell.
‘As an academic my approach to change was to move slowly, deliberately
and cautiously. I believed that the best way to minimize mistakes was through
extensive conversation, committee meetings, producing volumes of written material,
etc. In other words, the best way to make a decision was by slowly moving
through a process that involved lots of talking, thinking and analyzing before doing anything. As an entrepreneur I act
first and analyze later. Quick movement is essential because my goal is to get
into action and fail as fast as possible. Every time I fail, I can evaluate
what worked (and didn’t work), make quick adjustments, and get back into
action. Failing gives me lots of data that I can use to adapt as I’m moving forward.’
That willingness to fail, and the learning from failure as part of the
process of development, was something that others had also commented on in
relation to entrepreneurship and something that I am more than aware that we
discourage within the academic world.
There are three or four areas where this has been particularly
successful (although the exact methods have changed in each case, and that goes
back to the idea of learning on the go). With employability I was asked to
chair a review. I identified the issues (the lack of embeddedness) constructed
a strategy and, with colleagues in the Careers Network costed out what was
possible. We took this to senior management, got the go ahead to make the
changes (although on a lower budgets than originally requested) and created a
model for employability that has by any standards been successful, lifting
Birmingham close to the top of the league tables. What is more the model has been
taken and applied in different ways in a number of different UK universities,
becoming known as the ‘Birmingham Model’, a clear sign of recognition and success. I followed this up with the
establishment of an in-house student employment agency (Worklink) despite being
told that we could never deliver on this internally, given the University's track record on such projects, and would be better off
buying an existing model off the shelf. I made the case for doing it ourselves and the result has been groundbreaking and succesful.
Switching areas slightly, I was asked to act as academic
lead on a Higher Education Academy sponsored project on Valuing Teaching at
Birmingham (VT@B). This aimed to identify how academic staff perceived teaching
across the institution and to make recommendation to improve the outlook and value
of teaching as a part of the wider academic process. The issue here was perhaps more
of perception than reality but there were clear things that could be
done and I made it my task to get these on the agenda of senior management and
delivered. We now support the academic promotions process with workshops and training
for Heads of School, placing teaching alongside research as well as addressing
other equality and diversity issues. We have also established a Birmingham
Teaching Academy and advertised for international Birmingham Teaching Fellows
to encourage and promote excellence and innovation in teaching. The landscape
has changed and teaching is now talked about alongside research as one of the strengths of the University. More importantly, however, the fact that the project existed, was
very well publicised and that I spoke to the senior team about it constantly
meant that the valuing of teaching became part of the conscious messaging of
the institution even before the project reported and that, in itself, has made
a significant difference to perceptions.
I could point to similar action around academic performance
and on issues of equality and diversity, perhaps with less obvious or visible success at
present, but in each case I set out with a clear objective, a sense of urgency
in terms of implementation and what I would generally think of as an
entrepreneurial mind set (as defined in the points set out above). I think I
have surprised myself, at least looking back on the last three years, on how successful
some of this has been. What I probably need to do now, however, is to see
whether the same principles can be applied to research as well as to the
management of the institution. Whether I can make the entrepreneurial mindset work for me individually as well as for the University as a whole.Friday, 18 July 2014
Entering the Discworld Part II: Metaphorics and Macedonia
I wanted to pick up on what I was saying in the last posting
and develop this a little further. I am thinking here particularly about the
very narrow boundary between academic theory and fiction. I read a blog yesterday
commenting on the plagiarism accusations levelled at Žižec. It was not the
accusations that struck me (they appear to be becoming ever more frequent with
reference to well-known academics and I may come back to that at a later date).
The issue that resonated with me was the way in which the author reflecting on their
own experience as a student held an undimmed admiration for those who were capable
of producing theory, a sense of awe and wonder at the intellectual weight, and
a feeling of utter inadequacy at never being able to achieve this level of
academic mastery. I can sympathise with that, in spades, and I always tended to
blame it on the dyslexia…
Things have moved on. I have read much more theory. I feel
comfortable with Foucault, Derrida, Levi-Strauss, whoever it might be. More
importantly I have learnt, for myself, how to engage with them; how, I might
say, to ‘play the game’. But that is the nub of the issue, I cannot convince
myself that this is not a game. To that end Terry Pratchett is as significant
in terms of theory and religion as any of the major French authors that I have
just mentioned. His insights are equally as profound and worth playing with. I
just find the way he presents them, within the context of a comic novel, so
much more conducive and convincing.
Last summer we decided to take our holidays touring round
Macedonia and neighbouring countries (beginning and ending in Sofia and heading
down to Greece for the last few days of the tour). We tend to take these guided
tour holidays because you can see so many places that might otherwise be off
the beaten track, but more importantly all the thinking and planning is done for
you and so long as you are at the bus at a particular time it will take you
where you need to go. This leaves many long hours of bus travel, between the
various sights on the tour, to think and reflect on life, the universe and
everything (to quote another inspirational theorist on religion and much else
besides). During this last trip I found myself devising a whole new ‘theory’ of
religion, entirely tongue in cheek, potentially believable, but entirely suited
to the many different contexts that confronted us in Macedonia. I called this
theory ‘metaphorics’ (only to find on my return that there is a sub-discipline
with that name already established in literary theory, and I hasten to add
there is no connection with my own ‘theory’).
Let me take you to Skopje, the capital of Macedonia. The
current regime has decided to rip the centre out of the town and to rebuild it
in a distinctly post-modern style. They also have something of an obsession
with statues. They are everywhere, from the two enormous statues of Alexander
and Phillip of Macedon at each end of the main thoroughfare to hundreds of
smaller statues lining bridges, buildings and fountains and filling up any kind
of public space. Surely there is a way of interpreting all this by looking at
the interrelations between the statues, their subject matter, and the various
meanings they hold. You can then look, perhaps using a quasi-structuralist
methodology, at the patterns that are created and, behind that, at the power
play that is implicit in the choices and placing of the different images. Such
an analysis is at least plausible.Now move to any one of the many Orthodox churches we visited, perhaps in Ohrid, or the Rila Monastery in Bulgaria. Each of these is also covered in images and there is a long history of the analysis and careful placing of these images within the liturgical space of the church.
In Ohrid there was one church, however, where the guide told us that the images were deliberately different, they tended to subvert, in interesting ways, the traditional structures and presented elements that we are much more used to seeing in renaissance painting (although some hundred years or so earlier). The same analysis could be undertaken in this context as with the statues of central Skopje, with the same attention to space, intertextuality and even to power, to read off the religious message of the building. Couldn’t we begin to develop a ‘theory’ of religion out of this kind of methodology, use a few long words, wrap the spatial and power related elements up in some kind of obscurantist jargon, add an element of time and then generalise outrageously to claim some ultimate (albeit essentially subjective) truth underpinning not just these examples, but any kind of example you care to choose, and finally to give it a grand name ‘metaphorics’ just so that people remember it. Isn’t this the way all theory works? And if it is, then what is it that such theory adds, apart from recognition in academic circles for the one who dreams it up?
Thursday, 17 July 2014
On Entering the Discworld
Last weekend I drove up to Leeds to help transport some
second hand books to be sold at the International Medieval Congress. While
driving I listened, once again, to a couple of Tony Robinson’s reading of Terry
Pratchett’s Discworld novels. I bought these originally when I was travelling
back and forth, from Kidderminster to Retford in North Nottinghamshire, during
the final illnesses of my parents and, subsequent to their deaths (within three
months of each other), while my sister and I were sorting out the house, the
estate and related matters. On that occasion I simply listened to the next
novel that I found within the local bookshop (since closed of course) and so
followed the series in no particular order. On this occasion I have decided to
listen in order and over the weekend got as far as ‘Sourcery’, number five in
the series according to the CD.
It is not so much the specific content of the story that
interests me at this point. It is first of all the effect of spending two and
half hours at a time driving and listening to the reading of a novel. This is
different from reading. Half my mind (or perhaps it should have been more than
half my mind) is on the act of driving and the various diversions of motorway
traffic. The text, however, is also mediated through a voice - with Tony
Robinson a very persuasive voice - and this does, to my mind, change the
experience. As I arrived, negotiated the traffic of inner-city Leeds to find
the University, and then turned the engine, and the CD off, I left one world,
the Discworld, and entered another world, that of second hand book selling and the Medieval Congress. It
took some adjusting (well, perhaps not that much!). What is more, having been on the road a couple of days,
fairly consistently, and having listened to five or six CDs worth of text, the
adjustment back into the real world of my everyday life was somewhat more
challenging than I had imagined. I was still living, at least in part,
somewhere entirely different, not far from Ankh-Morpork.
The other factor that struck me was the way in which the
texts of the Discworld spoke so significantly into the world I currently live
in. I have always felt that Pratchett is one of the most insightful commentators
on religion (far more so than the academics of this world, and actually more so
than many senior religious figures). I use elements of his novels on a regular
basis in my Introduction to the Study of Religion module, although it saddens
me to note that the students rarely appreciate either the references or the
insights. But it is Pratchett’s insight into human nature, and particularly into
the nature of human institutions in the modern world that I find so uncanny and
so real. There is something about the Unseen University that, despite its
subject matter (magic) and its rather arcane structures, not to mention the
architecture, is remarkably familiar and speaks directly into my own experience
of trying to engage with colleagues, and especially the senior management, of
an institution such as my own University. You can see just the same responses,
the same disputes, the same fears, the same mistakes, the same triumphs, and, in so
many ways, the same people. That, of course, is part of the genius of a writer
such as Terry Pratchett.
There is another element, however, that links the world of the novels,
the Discworld, and my own experiences of academia. This is perhaps more
difficult to express, but in some way combines the previous two elements. I have
always felt, in some odd way, that to enter into the academic life is to enter
into a fictional world. I don’t really mean this in the sense of the University
as an unreal space. The physicality of the institution, the students, my
colleagues, the administrators, the managers etc. are all real enough, and while there is an
element of all institutional life that has to do with the playing of games, the
‘micro-politics’ of everyday life, this is the ‘real’, in very much the same
way that so many of Pratchett’s characters are ‘real’. This is one reason I
tend to towards management and encouraging others to fulfil themselves. That
engagement with colleagues, other human beings, is something I can relate to:
it is my work; it is something concrete.
What I find ‘unreal’, and perhaps
always have, is that which others seem to get so obsessed about, that is the
research, the theory, the ‘ideas’ and the subject matter of what we teach. I write
about ‘religion’, I engage in fieldwork, I read the theories of others, I think
and I construct my own analysis, I then write and I teach this to others.
Entering into that world, the world of research, of writing and even of teaching,
is for me to enter the world of the fictional. I can never fully take it
seriously. It will always have something of the air of unreality about it, a
flimsy construction that I am actively willing to stay standing upright (perhaps by magic
alone) and know could be brought crashing down at any time. I find that
expressed so perfectly within the Discworld novels, the ever encroaching
forces of the nether regions, the creatures of the dungeon dimensions, that
need to be kept just beyond reality. That is what I feel about research, theory
and the attempt to talk intelligently about religion, about society or perhaps
about anything ‘real’ at all. And as with the end of the journey, the arrival, whether in Leeds or
Kidderminster, or wherever it may be, there will have to come a time when I need to
leave the car, leave the construction of theory, and adjust to the real world
around me, and that is never entirely easy.
Tuesday, 8 July 2014
Religious Diversity, Encounter and Prejudice
I said that I would come back to the Superdiversity conference at the end of June and there is one issue in particular that I have
been reflecting on and would want to explore further.
The first plenary was by Gill Valentine and outlined a
project that she was involved in around questions of prejudice. At the risk of simplifying
considerably, the gist of her argument was that a number of recent studies had
shown that in areas of high diversity the day to day contact between people was
both polite and tolerant, with little evidence of tension or underlying
prejudice. She noted that the research on which this conclusion was based
emphasised observation in public places and the analysis of what she referred
to as ‘encounters’ (I got the impression that this was something of a technical
term in a particular strand of recent geographical thinking and I will need to
follow this up). Her work, and that of the team of which she is a part, has
been investigating this further in the UK and Poland by seeking out individuals
and engaging in detailed in depth interviews. This work shows that out of the
public sphere, in the privacy of an individual’s own house, then there remains
a considerable level of unspoken prejudice. The public politeness and tolerance
is seen as a necessity imposed on the individual by the norms of society (‘political
correctness gone mad’, or something equivalent). For Valentine the discourse
that her team has identified in private, the one in which prejudice still
predominates, was implicitly seen as the ‘truth’ and the one to be noted, while
that of the public spaces was fragile and uncertain.
I find this interesting, not least because my recent book is
based almost entirely on the public discourses that Valentine appears to
dismiss. First, it is interesting to note that there is other work out there
which reinforces this, and one possibility for exploring this further is a
paper by Susanne Wessendorf on ‘common place diversity’ which appears to link
very closely with my own ideas. Wessenfdorf is working within IRiS so I will be
following this up and will see what can be learnt from it. Second, Valentine’s
work appears to suggest that my own analysis is flawed. That may be the case,
but I do want to try and explore this further.
At the root of this, I want to suggest, is a methodological
question. In a previous paper I proposed the possibility of three different
discourses on religion within society that can be identified with three
different data collecting methods. There is the discourse that is based on what
people will claim in public as their ‘religion’ that can be seen in the census
data and the debates around that, particularly in Abby Day’s work. There is the
discourse that an individual will use about their own faith, that is complex,
contradictory, and that is uncovered through in-depth interviews, narrative
methodologies or something similar. And finally there is a wider ‘public’
discourse about religion in society, what we all basically assent to, that is
what I discovered through observation and listening to public conversations on
religion. In the paper I began with the three discourses and looked at possible
methods for ‘hearing’ them. We could, just as easily, begin with a series of
methods and ask what kinds of discourses are ‘heard’ through those methods. So,
with the encounter literature in geography, for example, we hear ‘public
discourses’. With in-depth interviews we hear a very different ‘discourse’,
whether that is one of faith in terms of the analysis above, or prejudice in
terms of Valentine’s work. The real question, however, is how far we should
give priority to one of these discourses over the others and what kinds of hierarchy
(whether explicit or implicit) should be given to these discourse, and by
implication the methodologies that uncover them.
I am currently in the process of writing a Leverhulme bid
that aims to test some of the claims made through my book. This has been
relatively straightforward and has the advantage of being very easy to express.
Leverhulme, however, like methodological creativity and I was not finding
anything that I could get my teeth into at this level. The above discussion,
however, raises a very interesting possibility. Was the discourse on ‘diversity’
that I found in the superdiverse neighbourhood of Handsworth a product of the
superdiversity, as I proposed (by contrast to a discourse on ‘difference’ in
the less religiously diverse neighbourhood of Highgate), or was it, perhaps, a
product of the observational, encounter based, methodology that I was using.
The project, therefore, could perhaps test both the impact of superdiversity on
one axis, and the impact of methodology on another and see what happens at the
various points of intersection. That would probably make quite an interesting
and suitably sophisticated and original proposal that I would hope Leverhulme
might be interested in.
Thursday, 3 July 2014
If at first you don't succeed
On 24th June I turned 52 and, having been in the academic
world for just over 25 years, I am probably about half way through my academic
career (which is clearly not the same as any career I may have in full time
employment). I am also at something of a cross roads in terms of the direction
of my current role within the University here in Birmingham. This is, perhaps a
good time to come back to this blog and to try once again to see what I must do
to make it work, both for myself but also, and equally importantly, to provide
something that others might want to read and to follow.
I will continue to maintain the fourfold structure that I
began the blog with, the 'Quartet' of the title. That is still relevant, but I
may aim to be more flexible in the way I engage with the different strands. I
need to allow more interweaving, but also more opportunity to talk about things
that are happening around me that may not fit neatly into that particular
categorisation. I may also, over time, add further strands, more strings to my
bow if you like. I will, however, continue to make connections and try to
construct the blog in a way that allows the reader to follow the different
threads.
One of the things that I have done much more of since last
posting to this blog is to look at, and follow, a number of other newsfeeds and
blogs. It strikes me that there are essentially two types of blog. In the first
it is the topic that is of most importance. Either an individual is recognised
as a leading expert in a particular field, or they are able to draw together material and links that
provide an authoritative commentary on a particular topic (whether academic,
political, cultural or whatever), or the individual has their own obsession
(whether short or long term) that they wish to share with others. The other
form is based much more around the individual, a particular personality, or
somebody who has an interesting job or role that others wish to follow for
whatever reason. The best blogs, of course, combine these, a clear focus on a
topic and an interesting and well-informed personality providing the
commentary. I know from the start, therefore, that this blog is never going to
meet either of those criteria. My interests are far too varied to keep any
single interest, and I am sure my style and personality is not going to set the
world on fire. I will, however, aim to focus more on the second than the first.
I want to provide an opportunity to chat, to explore, and to engage on a whole
range of issues that will come up as I struggle with various intellectual and
academic issues that engage me.
The other question I have considered is whether Twitter might be a more
sensible approach. I am told that blogs are on their way out, declining in
number, not being followed, and giving way to more immediate and interactive
forms such as Twitter. That is all very well, I fully understand the reasons
for this, both from the point of view of the authors and the readers. This does
not, however, fit with my own needs, or really my own personality.
At the beginning of the week I attended the first half of a
conference on Superdiversity run by the Institute for Research intoSuperdiversity (IRiS) here in Birmingham. This was a really great
conference that brought together a truly interdisciplinary crowd to discuss a
very wide range of issues around the theme of superdiversity. I will no doubt
come back to some of the content from the papers over the next few
weeks. The point I want to make here, however, is something about the way in
which I tend to engage with conferences in general and how that relates to the question of Twitter
or blog.
It may be a consequence of my dyslexia, but I find while I
enjoy listening to the papers, I can never think of an appropriate question to
ask immediately after any particular presentation. At one level I need to go back, in my
own mind, over the argument, the illustrations, the issues raised etc. and to
process the information much more slowly (which is also why I find conferences
that are too crowded in terms of papers very difficult and why I also prefer to
get out after a really interesting paper to be on my own rather than chatting
inanely over coffee or lunch, but that is another matter). Secondly, I always
find myself wanting to bring ideas from one paper into conversation with those
of another, and both into dialogue with something that I have been reading recently, or something that I vaguely remember from last month, last year or whenever. My response to the issues would never by a single statement or a
straight forward question. I need the time and the space to work through the
ideas, to explain the connections, to try out possibilities and to see what
happens when the theory from one paper is matched against the data or examples
from another, and so on. I cannot say what I want to say in a limited number of
characters, it just would not make sense. In those terms, a blog -a chance to
work through in a reasonable length of text a series of related ideas - is probably
the ideal medium. That then, is what I aim to do as I begin, once again, to get
this blog up and running.
My aim, therefore, is to write something each week, drawing
on issues, reading, conferences, thinking, etc. that have happened that week
and to upload the blog first thing each Monday morning. Last time I managed to
keep going for 10 posts. I am fully committed this time, to doing better than
that and, hopefully, getting into a routine that will see me through the next
25 years of my academic career…
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