Filed under: Uncategorized
So, I think I’ve been avoiding this blog because its visibility has changed. Originally I started this blog with the intention of only sharing it with Dan and Deborah- both of whom are my consummate cheerleaders and have been listening to my thoughts on this project from its inception. So, many of the first posts are written in a sort of shorthand – to remind myself of particular points of reference or central themes to keep my brain on track. However, little by little I have opened it up to other eyes and brains – many of whom do not know all of the details fueling the larger landscape of my dissertation. Which, of course, makes more sense if I’m going to use the format of a Blog on the wonderful world of the “interweb”. So, although this site will continue to function as a space where I hash out ideas and generally try to keep the ball rolling when my formal writing is “stuck”- it will also become a space where I work on clarifying my ideas and grounding my language. Often friends and family ask about my progress and the work I am doing and a site like this might be a great way to share what I’m doing (as well as how I’m doing). Having a more diverse readership will force me to distill my words and ideas into their most accesible form. This does not mean making my work less complex- but making my words more succinct, to provide a detailled and navigatable map from idea to idea. It is often easy when my head is immersed in a bunch of academic texts to make huge leaps of logic in my writing, making what seem to me to be lucid claims that are actually backgrounded by a slew of tangled theories and literary histories. Also, academic terms or “jargon” can sometimes become an easy way to “shorthand” an idea or theoretical framework, however, this can alienate readers and add a sense of exclusion I want to avoid. This is something I don’t necessarily enjoy in other academic’s writing- except when it makes me feel “smart” when I know what they’re talking about- and I’d like to work against that impulse and tradition in academic writing. (In the same breath I love the poetic quality and complexity of writers like Heidegger, Merleau-Ponty, Julia Kristeva, and Deleuze and Guattari- but maybe more on this in another post).
In addition, I will probably expand the subect matter of the blog to include my teaching and more general day-to-day observations and events, however the primary subject matter will be moving toward the end goal of my degree. Beginning again.
1 Comment so far
Leave a comment
Please feel free to post and add your own comments- I’d especially like to hear what other’s perceptions/memories are of frontier narratives whether childhood stories or presidential images. Anyone watch No Country for Old Men? I used it in my class last semester and it is a great comparison with the John Wayne classic The Searchers. I’m thinking about writing a comparative paper for a conference sometime…after I get my other writing done….
Comment by Susan October 18, 2008 @ 10:29 pm