truepenny: artist's rendering of Sidneyia inexpectans (mfu: ik-phd)
[personal profile] truepenny
I got an email this afternoon from an actor with the Henley Street Theatre* in Richmond, Virginia. He's getting ready to play Hieronimo in The Spanish Tragedy; he said he found my dissertation chapter extremely helpful and thanked me for putting it online.

This is probably the best compliment my academic work has ever received, and I have to tell you, it makes the unending nightmare-about-a-plague of writing and defending and revising and depositing my dissertation seem actually worthwhile.

Because, frankly, the point of a dissertation is not to produce something that will be read. It's to demonstrate to your committee that you can sustain a book-length research project and not be an embarrassment to your alma mater in public. The dissertation gets deposited with the University of Michigan, microfilmed, and sat upon with all the other thousands of doctoral dissertations like a dragon's hoard. Nobody reads it except your committee. Nobody's going to read it. You cannibalize it for articles, and it is assumed that one of your steps toward tenure (assuming also that you can land a tenure-track job, which has not been a safe assumption any time these past twenty years and more) will be turning your dissertation into a book. I.e., something to be published and read, by the small and rarefied sub-culture that reads academic literary criticism and scholarship.

I put my dissertation online because:
(a.) I could;
(b.) since I was bailing out of academia, I didn't need to cannibalize it for anything;
(c.) some of y'all (being the audience of this blog) had expressed interest in reading it, and I was not about to make anyone pay UMich $55 or whatever it is they charge.

And I suppose I may have hoped that people interested in Shakespeare or revenge tragedy or Seneca might come across it and find it useful or interesting or entertaining . . . but there's a big difference between hoping for something and actually having someone email you and say your work has helped them in preparing to do the most important thing anyone can ever do with a play: perform it.


---
*The website is due for a major overhaul, and they ask that interested parties please check back after the first of the year.

Date: 2007-12-18 10:57 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fidelioscabinet.livejournal.com
Oh, cool beans! Especially since people putting a play on mean it's Not Dead Yet. Helping to keep things like that Not Dead is a Good Work.

Date: 2007-12-18 11:30 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dsgood.livejournal.com
Congratulations!

Date: 2007-12-19 01:21 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] difrancis.livejournal.com
Because of your example, and because I"m likely never to get back to it, I've decided to do the same with my dissertation. I actually thought it had good things in it and hope that it might be useful to someone writing about obscure Victorian women novelists (and some not so obscure). So that's what I'm gonna do.

Di

Date: 2007-12-26 06:39 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] truepenny.livejournal.com
That's awesome.

Date: 2007-12-19 01:40 am (UTC)
libskrat: (Default)
From: [personal profile] libskrat
Ahem. I run a digital archive that takes in dissertations.

Just sayin'.

Date: 2007-12-19 03:02 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rarelylynne.livejournal.com
...and of course, we're glad to have a copy of it as well (but I'll probably just order it from UMI so that you can have the whopping $12 in royalties...)

Date: 2007-12-19 03:23 am (UTC)
larryhammer: floral print origami penguin, facing left (Default)
From: [personal profile] larryhammer
Coolness.

---L.

Date: 2007-12-19 02:00 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] oracne.livejournal.com
So cool.

Date: 2007-12-19 06:33 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] bluestalking.livejournal.com
Ann Arbor!

Playground of my fusty, bookish childhood--misplaced East Coast (http://overheardinthevalley.blogspot.com/) of the Midwest.

Date: 2007-12-19 08:02 pm (UTC)
heresluck: (book)
From: [personal profile] heresluck
That is REALLY cool. And not terribly surprising, from my point of view, because it's a terrific reading of the play. I still think the chapter on Titus is one of the coolest things EVER. I mean, anything that can keep me interested in Titus for more than five seconds pretty much wins as far as I'm concerned.

Date: 2007-12-19 09:30 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] smills47.livejournal.com
Three cheers, I say!

Date: 2007-12-20 01:59 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jade-sabre-301.livejournal.com
While I have not used your dissertation, I did end up reading one for a book report last semester, and I read bits and pieces of a few more for another research paper this semester.

They're dense, awful things, but I also feel kinda bad for the people who wrote them, because they're so long and take so much work and then, like you said, are probably just going to be cannibalized anyway. But...it's kinda fun to see what people decided to zoom in on anyway.

Date: 2007-12-20 11:46 pm (UTC)
From: [personal profile] cheshyre
Tres cool.

Also good to hear about the production, though I doubt I can get to Virginia in that timeframe.

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