Note: You can comment on this or any past posting by going to:
http://amps-tools.mit.edu/tomprofblog/
Folks:
The posting below looks at the handling of rejection and failure
in the writing/publishing process. It is from a free on-line monthly
newsletter, Flourish, for scholarly writers available at: http://www.wendybelcher.com/pages/FlourishNewsletter.html
, edited by author Wendy Belcher [www.wendybelcher.com].
April 2006, vol. 2, no. 4. Flourish encourages and connects graduate
student, faculty, and independent scholarly writers in the social
sciences and humanities. Copyright © 2005. Wendy Belcher.
All rights reserved. Reprinted with permission.
Regards,
Rick Reis
reis@stanford.edu
UP NEXT: The Balancing Act
Tomorrow's Research
--------------------------------------- 944 words -------------------------------------
On Journal Rejection
Rejection is the worst. Even though none of us believe that we
are great writers, getting an article returned from a journal
always feels like a direct blow to the chest. And yet, rejection
is the common experience of both the great and the terrible. You
are never more of a writer than at that moment when your hard
work has been returned with a curt word or devastating dismissal.
Like most things in life, you can't fail if you haven't tried.
This month, two readers wrote in about the business of handling
rejection and failure. I'm always interested in hearing readers'
thoughts and experiences.
Rejection Lines
Some words of wisdom and comfort from a faculty member in literature.
"I'm sorry to hear about the experience with the journal.
I've had that happen to me---I've seen some of the most inexplicable
(and sometimes careless or rude) reader's reports. Once I had
an article rejected in three days! (With the glacial pace of peer
review in the world of academic publishing, this must be some
kind of record.) The editor told me that it was so bad that he
wasn't even going to send it on to his readers. Well, I didn't
change it at all, and send it to another [better] journal and
they accepted it without any revisions (and it was published last
year.) Go figure. I just thought that it was a good piece---that
editor did shake my confidence a bit, but I just decided to keep
believing in the piece.
"The best advice I ever got came at a seminar on publishing--the
scholar told us that when we were ready to send out an article,
make out three different envelopes to three different journals.
Send it to the first--if it gets rejected, then send it to the
second. If it gets rejected again, send it to the third... His
point was that the whole process is so subjective that you need
to give your work the benefit of the doubt a few times before
pulling the plug on it (or putting it in a drawer indefinitely).
I basically follow this process, unless I find something in a
reader's report that is so compelling that it makes me revise
a bit. But, I always try to get it back out ASAP.
"I too feel like I have a terrible time finding the right
journals for my work, and this is half the battle. I'm not theoretical
enough for some journals; too theoretical for others (one report
complained that I cited Edward Said, for example). And when my
work is on really obscure materials, it adds additional complications.
I often get reports where the person clearly doesn't know much
about the material. It is sometimes hard to find good readers
for your work, who, even if they don't accept the work, can offer
good revision suggestions. Aargh! It is frustrating, but I hope
that you send that work back out a few more times! I've been told
that PMLA is a great place to send work---they don't accept a
lot of articles, but they always find good readers and give suggestions."
Accepting Failure
Reader: After a fairly successful graduate school career, I just
got my first tenure-track job. I need to write, but I find that
I don't know how. There is something wrong and I can't figure
out what. So I get anxious and don't do it. (My dissertation was
ambitious but sucked.) I am hoping that information might alleviate
the anxiety and I can be more productive. Do you have any thoughts?
Wendy: I can certainly understand the anxiety. I think graduate
students are caught between the ideal world where all graduate
students receive mentoring and the real world where busy professors
have little time to instruct graduate students in the brass tacks
of writing articles and books. Students think it is just them,
but it isn't. It's a general problem in graduate education. So,
you are not weird or alone. Fortunately, you don't always need
a human being, there are a lot of helpful books out there, some
listed at my website. I can highly recommend any book by Robert
Boice. Be of good courage!
Reader (one month later): Just wanted to drop you a note about
how things are going. I have been rethinking the writing process
and the Boice has been very helpful. Writing daily is important
and writing in small increments even more so. And, I finally understand
that, at least for me, I need to rewrite! I had never gone through
the full editing process before, and it has helped me to see that
brilliance is work. The fear of stupidity that many people,
and I think especially women, struggle with comes from the immediate
sensation of failure that drafting induces, the failure to be
brilliant from the get-go. I think you need an experience when
writing happens gradually to realize that most, if not all, can
write and write well.
News from the Editor
I've been working on a revise and resubmit notice from a journal.
It is always difficult to get my head back inside an article that
I haven't worked on for a while, but fortunately I had really
good recommendations from the reviewers. I haven't taken all of
their advice, but seeing the article from their perspective helped
to estrange it from my brain. They saw as unclear parts that I
had thought were perfectly clear, but on revisiting those parts
with their comments in hand I saw that the reviewers were right:
I hadn't been clear. Such recommendations make the peer review
process seem like a great invention.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TOMORROW'S PROFESSOR MAILING LIST
is a shared mission partnership with the
American Association for Higher Education (AAHE) http://www.aahe.org/
The National Teaching and Learning Forum (NT&LF) http://www.ntlf.com/
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------