Should you go to graduate school in the humanities?
No, because you will find yourself surrounded by neurotics
who wring their hands and solipsistically lament “the state of the field.”
Yes, because you will find yourself surrounded by thoughtful
individuals who engage in continuous critical self-examination about their work
and its place in society.
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For about the past month, my Facebook feed has been filled
with discussions on this question, should you go to graduate school in the
humanities? This question typically accompanies links to articles exploring the
question. It started with this piece in Slate,
and has continued more recently with
this piece in The New Yorker, with
several others in between.
It’s good that these articles are being written. Going to
graduate school represents a substantial investment of time and energy on a
kind of professional development that, given the precarious nature of the
academic job market, entails tremendous risk. That being said, I haven’t read
these articles. When one of my Facebook friends posts them, I never click on
the link, and I often hide the post from my Facebook feed. These articles
aren’t for me—they’re for those who haven’t yet made a decision that I made
many years ago. I know that, at best, these articles will provide me with an
opportunity to pat myself on the back and say, yes, going to graduate school
was the right choice. A far more likely possibility is that these articles will
leave me with a feeling of regret about a choice that I can’t undo. I’m prone
to anxiety as it is—I don’t need Slate
or The New Yorker to help me on that
front.
Which is why I’ve been surprised that so many of my friends
have continued to post these articles and engage in lengthy discussions of
them, since most of these friends are are, like me, on the tail end of their
Ph.D. and thus not the articles’ target audience. After some discussion with a
few of them, it became apparent that this wasn’t about wallowing in their
depression, as I often suspected. Nor was it about figuring out what to advise
someone were they to ask if they should go to grad school (like the articles’
titles suggest). It wasn’t even about how our field is perceived by the
middlebrow intellectual audience that Slate
and The New Yorker represent.
Instead, these articles are serving as a vector through
which people can communicate their existing feelings of anxiety about the
future. There’s an element of self-flagellation to this that I don’t
appreciate. By broadcasting their regrets about their decision to go to
graduate school, many graduate students not only insult themselves; they also
insult others who are in the same precarious situation. But the fact that these
discussions appear to be so damn common among later-year Ph.D. students
indicates that they are filling a real need—a need that our graduate programs
are not filling.
There are two personality traits of people who get into
graduate school: ambition and inquisitiveness. These two are not mutually
exclusive; in fact, if you want to be successful you had better be both. But
graduate programs—top-tier graduate programs in particular—are not equally
skilled at cultivating both sides of their students personalities. As the job
market has become more competitive, the culture of graduate school has, in many
tangible and intangible ways, done more to cultivate ambition, such that, by
the time you complete your Ph.D., acquiring a tenure-track job has been imbued
with a symbolic importance that far exceeds its practical importance
But practically speaking, those jobs simply won’t be there
for many of us. Taking a broad view, I’m frustrated with the academy for not
doing more to adapt to the technological and economic changes that led to this
situation. Had the field adapted, it might’ve better demonstrated its worth and
there would be more jobs out there. But more immediately, I’m frustrated with
the academy for perpetuating an outdated sort of tenure-track fetishism that
places blinders on its students at a time when they most need a full range of
vision.
The reason many later-year Ph.D. students are posting
“should you go to graduate school?” articles is because there aren’t many
“should Ph.D.s get professorships?” articles out there. But that’s the question
we are—and should be—asking. Many of us lack the professional guidance
necessary to navigate this job market as it exists in 2013. How might it be
possible to subsist as an adjunct professor or a lecturer? Where does one find
international job opportunities? What about high schools or community colleges?
What about administrative positions or libraries? What private industry jobs
might value a humanities degree, and how do we market ourselves towards those
jobs? Is it possible to teach at a university on a part-time basis while doing
other things? How do we address the two-body problem?
A focus on narrowly defined professional ambitions—the tenure-track
professorship—makes just asking these questions an exercise fraught with anxiety.
But graduate programs have a responsibility to answer these questions, and to
do so early in their students’ graduate careers. If graduate programs did that, it might be possible for their Ph.D.s to see that there are many ways to succeed as members of an academically-literate intellectual community regardless of whether or not they are "academics" in the most conservative sense of the word. This is necessary on a
practical level to ensure students' financial well-being, but it’s also
necessary to ensure their emotional well-being. And I think that they would be easier questions to answer if graduate programs cultivated inquisitiveness the way that they cultivate ambition. If graduate programs don't start doing this, then we’ll all just keep
freaking out on Facebook.
ADDENDUM: If graduate schools do want to narrow their students' options to the tenure-track professorship, they're free to do so, but they had better accept far fewer students into their programs. If they still want to exploit graduate student labor, they had better provide those students with more professional options.
ADDENDUM: If graduate schools do want to narrow their students' options to the tenure-track professorship, they're free to do so, but they had better accept far fewer students into their programs. If they still want to exploit graduate student labor, they had better provide those students with more professional options.