By Joshua Rothman
The New Yorker - February 21, 2014
A few years ago, when I was a graduate student in English, I
presented a paper at my department’s American Literature Colloquium. (A
colloquium is a sort of writing workshop for graduate students.) The
essay was about Thomas Kuhn, the historian of science. Kuhn had coined
the term “paradigm shift,” and I described how this phrase had been used
and abused, much to Kuhn’s dismay, by postmodern insurrectionists and
nonsensical self-help gurus. People seemed to like the essay, but they
were also uneasy about it. “I don’t think you’ll be able to publish this
in an academic journal,” someone said. He thought it was more like
something you’d read in a magazine.
Was that a compliment, a dismissal, or both? It’s hard to say.
Academic writing is a fraught and mysterious thing. If you’re an
academic in a writerly discipline, such as history, English, philosophy,
or political science, the most important part of your work—practically
and spiritually—is writing. Many academics think of themselves,
correctly, as writers. And yet a successful piece of academic prose is
rarely judged so by “ordinary” standards. Ordinary writing—the kind you
read for fun—seeks to delight (and, sometimes, to delight and instruct).
Academic writing has a more ambiguous mission. It’s supposed to be dry
but also clever; faceless but also persuasive; clear but also
completist. Its deepest ambiguity has to do with audience. Academic
prose is, ideally, impersonal, written by one disinterested mind for
other equally disinterested minds. But, because it’s intended for a very
small audience of hyper-knowledgable, mutually acquainted specialists,
it’s actually among the most personal writing there is. If journalists
sound friendly, that’s because they’re writing for strangers. With
academics, it’s the reverse.
Professors didn’t sit down and decide to make
academic writing this way, any more than journalists sat down and
decided to invent listicles. Academic writing is the way it is because
it’s part of a system. Professors live inside that system and have made
peace with it. But every now and then, someone from outside the system
swoops in to blame professors for the writing style that they’ve
inherited. This week, it was Nicholas Kristof, who set off a rancorous
debate about academic writing with a column, in the Times, called “Professors, We Need You!”
The academic world, Kristof argued, is in thrall to a “culture of
exclusivity” that “glorifies arcane unintelligibility while disdaining
impact and audience”; as a result, there are “fewer public intellectuals
on American university campuses today than a generation ago.”
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