Brrr

Well, November finally hit Waco. Walking a half-mile to school in freezing rain really isn’t all it’s cracked up to be.

After our last Bibliography and Research class last night, several of us students had a mini-party, which was well-deserved in my opinion. Sangria, chips and salsa, and good conversation. And I’m totally not alone in my current disillusionment with the grad school thing. Several of us voiced the feeling that we’d expected to come to grad school to learn more about English literature, but instead of content, we’re getting career training. Granted, that was sort of the point of Bib & Research, I suppose, so none of us have lost heart completely yet, since we hope that next semester will be more content-based. Yet, I don’t know. I lot of what I’ve read about grad school is that it really is career training…I just didn’t believe it. Perhaps I should have. If that’s the case, what about those of us who don’t really want the career it’s training us for? There are at least two or three of us, I know, that don’t really intend to follow out the professor’s career path, seek tenure, and all of that. We either don’t want it badly enough to put up with the tenure-track requirements, or we don’t want it at all.

(Part of this is a problem of academia and scholarship being increasingly institutionalized…many of the great literary scholars and critics a hundred or a hundred and fifty years ago were not strictly academics. They were preachers. They were lawyers. They were journalists. Matthew Arnold was even a government employee, as a school inspector. But now, the idea of being a literary critic in your spare time is nearly unheard of. The barrier of entry into the field is horrendous.)

If what we really want out of grad school is the content rather than the career outcome, what better way would there be to get that content? 1) Reading on our own. But reading on our own doesn’t give the additional viewpoints or accountability that reading for class does. Also, you lose the discussion with others who are reading the same things. 2) Book club group or some such. I’ll grant you, I haven’t been in too many book clubs, but although I like the idea, I have a connotation of shallowness associated with them. As in, they read the latest “serious fiction” book and talk about how it relates to them, as opposed to how it relates to literature throughout history, which interests me more. Are there “academic” book clubs out there? If I started one away from a school environment, would people come and really engage the literature? 3) Take random classes. I like this idea, but it’s expensive. Plus, you’d never really be a part of the community, especially if the majority of the other students in the class were full-time students, and you weren’t.

So what I want is the content and the community that you get from being in school (especially the closer community you can get in a good graduate environment, which I think we have here), without the career training expectations and mentality. Where would one find that?

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4 Comments

  1. Sounds to me like you need to stick it out but start a book club among your peers… Oh, and figure out what your extra job will be and make plans for that…

    Well, I began this as an encouraging post. Really!

    OK, whatever else, I think you need to get the best you can from the school while also developing with some like-minded students in adding your own content.

    That is my totally ignorant opinion.

    And, for what it is worth, I think a version of your disillusionment occurs in other school settings…

  2. Sounds to me like you need to stick it out but start a book club among your peers… Oh, and figure out what your extra job will be and make plans for that…

    Well, I began this as an encouraging post. Really!

    OK, whatever else, I think you need to get the best you can from the school while also developing with some like-minded students in adding your own content.

    That is my totally ignorant opinion.

    And, for what it is worth, I think a version of your disillusionment occurs in other school settings…

  3. Yeah, you’re right…in fact, I really think we’ve got it pretty good here. The grad students seem to get along well, with each other and the teachers. I hear about departmental strife concerning tenure, etc., but it hasn’t affected us too much so far. I’ve heard about schools that are so competitive that the grad students are constantly sabotaging each other and stuff. Ugh. I’m not really complaining about the school, I just wanted to make that clear. I’m just lamenting that grad school in general is like this.

    Starting a book club here would be a great idea if any of us had enough time to read extra books.

  4. Yeah, you’re right…in fact, I really think we’ve got it pretty good here. The grad students seem to get along well, with each other and the teachers. I hear about departmental strife concerning tenure, etc., but it hasn’t affected us too much so far. I’ve heard about schools that are so competitive that the grad students are constantly sabotaging each other and stuff. Ugh. I’m not really complaining about the school, I just wanted to make that clear. I’m just lamenting that grad school in general is like this.

    Starting a book club here would be a great idea if any of us had enough time to read extra books.

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