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Main Author: Bauerlein, Mark
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ853072
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author Bauerlein, Mark
author_facet Bauerlein, Mark
Bauerlein, Mark
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Diminishing Returns in Humanities Research Bauerlein, Mark Tenure Essays Humanities Research Administration Audience Analysis Faculty Evaluation Research Projects Research Utilization The author discusses the shift from criticism-as-explanation to criticism-as-performance that has taken place in literary criticism over the past five decades, and the resultant surge in published offerings to what has become a diminishing audience. The question of supersaturation applies to the institutions that demand and reward humanities research: departments, deans, and fund providers. Tendering jobs and money, they force individuals to overproduce scholarly goods, creating an army of researchers meeting nonexistent audience needs. In 2006 the MLA Task Force on Evaluating Scholarship for Tenure and Promotion noted, "Over 62 percent of all departments report that publication has increased in importance in tenure decisions over the last 10 years." Furthermore, the percentage of departments' valuing research above teaching had more than doubled since 1968 (35.4 percent to 75.7 percent). That trend makes no sense. The MLA report, which every dean and chairman should read, underscores the shrinking audience, particularly cuts in library purchases of humanities books. The task force, however, holds off from recommending that the research mandate be scaled downward, instead advising departments to respect essays and "new media" publications, and to end the "dominance of the monograph." But it is hard not to judge a flat reduction in research requirements as the direct solution to the difficulties that junior faculty members face. Foundations, university humanities research centers, and other organizations that subsidize humanities research also should recognize the audience decline. The author contends that before another year of hirings and promotions and awards passes, decision makers should sit down and examine the larger consequences of requiring a monograph for tenure, approving projects on well-worn subjects, and pretending that books and essays that nobody reads are a proper allocation of resources and way of judging people.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ853072
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2009
record_format eric
spellingShingle Diminishing Returns in Humanities Research
Bauerlein, Mark
Tenure
Essays
Humanities
Research Administration
Audience Analysis
Faculty Evaluation
Research Projects
Research Utilization
Diminishing Returns in Humanities Research Bauerlein, Mark Tenure Essays Humanities Research Administration Audience Analysis Faculty Evaluation Research Projects Research Utilization The author discusses the shift from criticism-as-explanation to criticism-as-performance that has taken place in literary criticism over the past five decades, and the resultant surge in published offerings to what has become a diminishing audience. The question of supersaturation applies to the institutions that demand and reward humanities research: departments, deans, and fund providers. Tendering jobs and money, they force individuals to overproduce scholarly goods, creating an army of researchers meeting nonexistent audience needs. In 2006 the MLA Task Force on Evaluating Scholarship for Tenure and Promotion noted, "Over 62 percent of all departments report that publication has increased in importance in tenure decisions over the last 10 years." Furthermore, the percentage of departments' valuing research above teaching had more than doubled since 1968 (35.4 percent to 75.7 percent). That trend makes no sense. The MLA report, which every dean and chairman should read, underscores the shrinking audience, particularly cuts in library purchases of humanities books. The task force, however, holds off from recommending that the research mandate be scaled downward, instead advising departments to respect essays and "new media" publications, and to end the "dominance of the monograph." But it is hard not to judge a flat reduction in research requirements as the direct solution to the difficulties that junior faculty members face. Foundations, university humanities research centers, and other organizations that subsidize humanities research also should recognize the audience decline. The author contends that before another year of hirings and promotions and awards passes, decision makers should sit down and examine the larger consequences of requiring a monograph for tenure, approving projects on well-worn subjects, and pretending that books and essays that nobody reads are a proper allocation of resources and way of judging people.
title Diminishing Returns in Humanities Research
topic Tenure
Essays
Humanities
Research Administration
Audience Analysis
Faculty Evaluation
Research Projects
Research Utilization
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ853072