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Paula Trucks-Pape's avatar

I left a PhD. program in part because I saw Kristoff's "culture of exclusivity" materializing before me. I thought I would need to choose between addressing my research and writing to academia/theorists or to practitioners/a general public who could consider and maybe use my ideas in ways other than folks tied to post-secondary institutions.

That said, there are preferences (and bias) from the practitioner side as well with regard to writing style and conventions. It seems to me that academics write for people who a. have also been initiated into their (sometimes) esoteric niches, and b. have (or are expected to have) the professional time allotted to sift thoughtfully through the text. Practitioners are much more often readers than writers because their main focus is implementing ideas. For this reason, they may prefer more "practical" prose written not to provoke thought or introduce and prove new concepts, but instead to convey who, what, where, when, how as succinctly as possible.

I was stymied by this divide and, in fact, was chastised by both camps for my supposed adherence to one or the other. It is unfortunate that these rhetorical differences in discourse and in expectations curb dialog between these groups. I gave up on the academic route to finding a way to bridge the gap, but I'm glad to see others still working toward that goal!

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Kathleen Clare Waller's avatar

You’ve investigated this issue so thoroughly here and I agree with your points. It’s so difficult because the ideal is be able to do both - and reach several audiences, perhaps inviting the “excluded” to enter into that world if they are so inclined to understand further. But the reality of what universities want and the time we each have is different. Some are able to successfully do both and I find a lot of Substack academics doing this. I find occasionally I really want to use that esoteric language for the reasons you say (clarity, economy, avoiding ideological norms...) but it might get lost or turn people off. I actually find it fun to code switch among kinds of writing, but this is more possible because I’m independent now. Thanks for some great considerations, especially in regards to Kristoff.

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