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    I already knew this

    March 8, 2009
    R. Batty @ 11:52 am

    But reading about it in the New York Times just makes it that much more real, and that much more depressing.

    Doctoral Candidates Anticipate Hard Times

    By PATRICIA COHEN
    Published: March 6, 2009

    Chris Pieper began looking for an academic job in sociology about six months ago, sending off about two dozen application packets. The results so far? Two telephone interviews, and no employment offers.

    “About half of all the rejection letters I’ve received mentioned the poor economy as contributing to their decision,” said Mr. Pieper, 34, who is getting his doctorate from the University of Texas, Austin. “Some simply canceled the search because they found the funding for the position didn’t come through. Others changed their tenure-track jobs to adjunct or instructor positions.”

    “Many of the universities I applied to received more than 300 applications,” he added.

    Mr. Pieper is not alone. Fulltime faculty jobs have not been easy to come by in recent decades, but this year the new crop of Ph.D. candidates is finding the prospects worse than ever. Public universities are bracing for severe cuts as state legislatures grapple with yawning deficits. At the same time, even the wealthiest private colleges have seen their endowments sink and donations slacken since the financial crisis. So a chill has set in at many higher education institutions, where partial or full-fledge hiring freezes have been imposed.

    A survey by the American Historical Association, for example, found that the number of history departments recruiting new professors this year is down 15 percent, while the American Mathematical Association’s largest list of job postings has dropped more than 25 percent from last year.

    “This is a year of no jobs,” said Catherine Stimpson, the dean of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences at New York University. Ph.D.s are stacked up, she said, “like planes hovering over La Guardia.”

    The anticipated wave of retirements by faculty members who are 60-something is likely to slow as retirement savings accounts and pensions wither, administrators and professors say. That means that some students who have finished postdoctoral fellowships and who expected to leave for faculty positions are staying put for another year, which in turn closes off an option for other graduate students coming up the ladder.

    “I was encouraged to aim very high initially, but as I have watched more and more jobs pulled, I am worried about whether I can even get a postdoc,” said Vanessa Svihla, 33, a graduate student in science education at the University of Texas, Austin. She is defending her dissertation next month. “Amidst all the normal stress of finishing a dissertation and trying to get publications out, hiring freezes are a bit overwhelming,” she said.

    Although some people think that graduate school is a good place to wait out a crash, some undergraduates said they had either canceled or postponed plans to enter graduate school this fall because of the bad economy or their inability to get student loans.

    Aisha Hadlock, 21, a senior at Oberlin College who majored in Islamic studies, decided to delay graduate school for at least a year. “I don’t have the financial means to support myself through grad school in this economy, and grants and loans are so hard to get right now,” Ms. Hadlock said. The types of programs that offer generous financial aid “will be overrun with applicants,” she added.

    Andrew Delbanco, the chairman of the American studies program at Columbia University, said that the system producing graduate students was increasingly out of sync with the system hiring them.

    “It’s been obvious for some time — witness the unionization movement — that graduate students are caught between the old model of apprentice scholars and the new reality of insecure laborers with uncertain employment prospects,” Mr. Delbanco said. “Among the effects of the financial crisis will clearly be shrinkage both in graduate fellowships and in entry-level academic positions, so the prospects for aspiring Ph.D.’s are getting even bleaker.”

    Many in the humanities fear that their fields are going to suffer most. Humanities professors are already among the lowest-paid faculty members, according to the Humanities Indicators Prototype, a new, decade-long effort to establish a database of information led by the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.

    What’s more, nearly half of all the positions are part time — with no job security and no benefits — a situation that many educators expect to worsen.

    Many students now finishing their doctorates began working on them when the economy was in much better shape. It often takes about nine years to complete a dissertation in English, said Louis Menand, an English professor at Harvard, explaining that students have to devote so many hours to teaching and making money that they don’t have time left over to write.

    William Pannapacker, an associate professor of English at Hope College in Holland, Mich., who writes a column for The Chronicle of Higher Education under the name Thomas Benton, has frequently tried to dissuade undergraduates from pursuing a graduate degree in the humanities. He is convinced that the recession will push universities to trim the number of tenure-track jobs further.

    “It’s hard to tell young people that universities recognize that their idealism and energy — and lack of information — are an exploitable resource,” he wrote in a recent column. “If you cannot find a tenure-track position, your university will no longer court you; it will pretend you do not exist and will act as if your unemployability is entirely your fault.”

    Unless you are independently wealthy or really well connected, don’t apply, he advised.

    Margaret Peacock, 35, who spent eight years on her dissertation in Soviet history at the University of Texas, is one of the lucky ones. A winner of a federal Fulbright-Hays scholarship and the mother of three children, Ms. Peacock just accepted a tenure-track job at the University of Alabama. At the historian association’s convention in January, she said that a number of people who sat on hiring committees told her that they were pressing to complete faculty searches this year partly because “they are worried that there will be no budget for new hires” in the future.

    “I also know that many of the offers being made by departments to their chosen candidates are not as generous as they have been in past years, with higher teaching loads and less room to negotiate salary,” Ms. Peacock added. Americanists seem to be having a much tougher time now than those specializing in other historical areas, she said. “I am becoming increasingly convinced that I got in under the wire.”

    In the past 30 years, public and private money dedicated to the humanities has also significantly declined. The budget for the National Endowment for the Humanities is roughly a third of what it was at the high point of 1979, after adjusting for inflation, according to the Humanities Indicators data, though stimulus money may raise that figure.

    Only 13 percent, or about $16 million, makes its way into scholarly projects. And unlike the National Science Foundation and the National Institutes for Health, the humanities endowment does not give awards to postdoctoral students.

    Of course the humanities don’t require labs and expensive equipment, but as Leslie Berlowitz, the chief executive of the arts and sciences academy, notes, the humanities suffer more from across-the-board cuts because those professors are much less able to generate financing outside of the university, unlike the hard and social sciences. Such scholars also find fewer job opportunities outside of academia.

    Mr. Pieper is still looking but he is discouraged. “The timing of this downturn was exactly wrong for my entering the academic market, and there’s no guarantee it will be better next year,” he said. “It takes a long time for these situations to right themselves.”

    At my next dinner party

    February 27, 2009
    R. Batty @ 10:16 pm

    I guess this has been making the rounds on the interwebs for a while, but I only just caught wind of it and, well, clearly this is something I need to serve at my next Halloween party!


    Mmmm, cholesterol-filled braaaaaaains!

    I admit, the fact that it contains 1000+% of your recommended daily dose of cholesterol is a little frightening, but isn’t that just part of its appeal? You can read more about tasty pork brains here.

    StarCraft PWNZ LOTR

    February 11, 2009
    R. Batty @ 1:42 pm

    This is why I love my alma mater:

    UC Berkeley’s StarCraft 101

    happy birthday to me

    February 10, 2009
    R. Batty @ 12:28 am

    It’s been almost a week since I got back from Berlin and I’m still not really back on the work wagon yet. But do I really need to be? I mean, at least not until after my birthday, right?

    So today’s celebratory events included: 1) brownies for breakfast, 2) dinner with friends 3) getting a freakin’ ice cream maker from Jess and 4) going downtown to see the Swedish vampire film Let the Right One In.

    Now, not to turn this birthday post into an extensive film review, but I have to say that Let the Right One In was both highly enjoyable and seriously messed up. I don’t really know how to accurately describe it. In ways, it reminded me of Fargo with the bleak, icy landscapes and the gruesome black humor. Yet, it definitely takes that formula down a darker path. Maybe it’s because the movie centers on children rather than adults and completely subverts any notion of the innocence of youth. But without doubt the movie exploits the fact that sociopathic children are so much more disturbing than sociopathic adults. And that I think is what really makes the film chilling–it’s not the vampires that are frightening, but the brutal and senseless harm that the entirely human characters perform on one another. In a way, the sudden moments of intense vampiric violence in the film are a relief from the tense and twisted atmosphere that is the protagonist Oskar’s daily life.

    Overall, I found the film quite enjoyable, although I wouldn’t recommend it to everyone. It definitely doesn’t into either a horror or a romance genre, as most other vampire films do. Instead, it’s an intense psychological drama punctuated by dark humor and visually stunning scenes of mayhem. Sweet.

    safe and bewildered

    February 4, 2009
    R. Batty @ 10:52 am

    Thank the sweet baby Jesus, I’m finally home!

    After over two weeks of traveling in Europe, it feels fantastic to be back in my snug little Chicago apartment. The trip was great fun–I got to see some neat places (oh yeah, Sedlec ossuary, I’m talking about you!), but it was also completely exhausting. A general lack of sleep combined with an unexpected need to write a paper abstract amidst traveling to 4 countries and sleeping in 5 different beds over the course of only 6 days all came together to make one incredibly tired Batty. Thankfully, I slept like a log last night, even though I woke up at 7:30 this morning.

    The strange thing about it though is that it actually feels weird to be back home. It does absolutely feel like home: familiar, comfortable, etc. But its almost like I feel disoriented because it’s not disorienting, if that makes any sense. After two weeks of having pretty much no idea where I was most of the time, and understanding none of the conversation going on around me, I felt very much like a passive observer of a world that was just swirling past me. And I guess it’s that feeling of being a passive observer that I still have with me, even though I know exactly where I am and understand exactly what’s being said around me. I ‘m sure that like jet lag, that feeling will soon go away. For now I shall be content to remain safely home and oddly bewildered.

    Dear Students,

    December 12, 2008
    R. Batty @ 4:41 pm

    You kill me. You really do.

    When you use footnotes, the footnote goes at the end of the sentence, after the period. It does not go here 1. Where on earth do you get the idea that it goes before the period2? You’ve read texts with footnotes before. I know you have. I made you read texts with footnotes. So why, why do you insist on freakishly putting the footnote before the period?

    I know I’m excessively anal about things like footnotes.3 But honestly, when you’re 20 years old and in one of the leading colleges in the nation, I would think you would be able to figure this out. If you’d never seen at footnote before in your life, maybe I would be more understanding. But after 10 weeks of class reading sources with footnotes, after encouraging you repeatedly in class to look at websites on how to cite things properly, and after I marked up your papers the first time you used footnotes incorrectly, I would think you could get this down. Sure, it’s a minor detail, but that’s almost why it annoys me more. When students struggle with difficult concepts, you expect them to mess up. But when they can’t do something a well-trained chimp could do, I assume it’s because they’re being lazy, indifferent, and/or obstinate.

    In conclusion, students, if you want me to be angry when I grade your paper, go ahead and put that footnote before the period. I dare ya to.4


    1. Cf. half of the final papers I received this week.
    2. Looks really stupid before a question mark, doesn’t it?
    3. Dr. Tsou can attest to this, re: a certain BA paper we jointly supervised.
    4. Any defense attorney who would like to pioneer the footnote insanity defense should contact me asap.

    Off the hook, twice.

    December 10, 2008
    R. Batty @ 11:29 pm

    Lady luck seems to be with me this week. I thought that right now I would be miserably grading final papers and final exams. I thought I would be sitting idly at the Daley Center all day tomorrow, waiting to be called and rejected for jury duty (something tells me purple-haired PhD candidates tend not to make the final cut). I thought I would most likely be forced to combine my miseries and grade papers while waiting grumpily waiting to be rejected from jury duty. But I have unexpectedly been spared all these miseries! The professor of the class I was TAing this term offered to grade their final exams *and* their final papers (seriously awesome!!). And the automated recording I called this evening informed me that I was not needed for jury duty. Yee-freakin-haw!

    However, I am commited to not squandering these precious extra hours of my life. I am trying to get some dissertation work done before I really will have to grade a stack of research papers over the weekend. In that vein, I have finally finished reading a delightful nineteenth-century novel about honor killing and monomania. I suppose “delightful” is only an apt description if monomania and the unwritten law happen to be important to your dissertation research, as I wouldn’t really recommend the work for its literary merit. But then, I guess popular fiction is never really popular because of its literary merit. Ah well, at least I can scratch Beauchampe off my list. The prudent thing to do now would be to write some notes about the tale, but maybe a little rest first wouldn’t hurt ;-)

    the end of another quarter

    December 7, 2008
    R. Batty @ 6:53 pm

    The fall term is winding down at last. This means I’m done having to spend time in the classroom, but grading still lurks ominously on the horizon. I’ve managed to accumulate quite a pile of texts that need to be read for my own research once the term is truly over, but I am starting to wonder how I’m ever going to get through it all. Unlike bibliofemme, I am not a speedy reader.

    But rather than griping about work, I shall leave you instead with an 8-bit existential crisis courtesy of resignedgamer. Enjoy!


    Who knew the games of our childhood were so damn depressing?

    Who saves 200 year old garlic?

    November 19, 2008
    R. Batty @ 1:30 am

    This has to be a joke, right? Reportedly, a vampire slaying kit, circa 1800 was sold at auction in Natchez, MI, about a month ago for roughly $15,000 (http://antiquesandthearts.com/Antiques/AuctionWatch/2008-11-11__14-01-03.html). What seems incredible to me is not how much the thing went for at auction–I’d have actually thought some film promoter would have paid twice that to use it to market the latest tweenie-bopper sensation, the romantic vampire flick, Twilight. Instead, my mind is completely blown by the existence of vampire slaying kits from the early nineteenth-century. Sure, vampire folklore is by no means a modern invention, but who on earth would have actually owned a vampire slaying kit in the 1800s? Now, if we were talking early 20th century, post-Bram Stoker’s Dracula, it would seem less incredible to me since that story really popularized the idea of the vampire. But frankly, if this kit isn’t a total hoax then I think it raises some fascinating historical questions like, who would have had such a kit and why? Were items in the kit ever actually used–like the gun for example? And who authenticates something like this? Are there people out there with expertise on historical vampire-slaying kits?

    STO pwns MMORPGs

    November 7, 2008
    R. Batty @ 2:13 pm

    It’s a good thing there’s no release date for this yet, because I’m pretty sure that I’ll never get any work done again after this comes out. You know, because I get so much work done now and everything…



    Click the image for a link to the game trailer!

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