Wednesday, 2 March 2011

Things I Wish I’d Known Before I Started My PhD (No. 1 in a possible series?)

Doing a doctorate was something I kind of frivolously ambled into. I made my application for a scholarship before I had even finished my undergraduate degree, when I was still at the tender age of twenty. I didn’t really know what it actually meant, or how it was different from writing an undergraduate thesis. I happily sent off the forms, and then forgot about it as the final term stress of my BA took over. When I miraculously actually got a reply in the affirmative from the ESRC, I was actually a bit stuck with what actually happens nest. I tried to do a bit of half-hearted research, mostly googling, on what to expect from doctorate study, consisting of search terms like “HELP WHAT’S A PHD AND HOW DO I NOT FAIL?” About two years later I am still not really sure what it is all about, or how not to fail, but there are a few things I know now, that I wish I’d known then.

Firstly, archives can be unreliable! We may think of them as vast pools of instantly accessible knowledge, but it doesn’t always work like this. Many need weeks in notice to access particular sources. Others need letters from a supervisor to let you tap into their sweet historical goodness. These barriers can be overcome. Some barriers, however, cannot. The archives I use for the Manchester side of my thesis suddenly shut in the first year of my study. I say suddenly; in reality it had been planned for months but I hadn’t checked to know this. If I had been organised enough, I could have requested the items that were going into the darkest recesses of ‘deepstore’. Many of the records of this archive are still accessible in small institutions dotted around the city, but some of the more obscure documents are gone foreeeeeever (or at least 2013 - when I should have finished anyway).

Secondly, we may be living in the internet-age, but not everything has been catalogued. I have extensively searched computer databases of small local libraries and thought I had found every (published) piece of material on one aspect of my PhD. I then looked through countless footnotes of the secondary literature relating to this aspect, to make sure I hadn’t missed anything. I thought I hadn’t. Then one day I was browsing a shelf in the library, and I found an item that wasn’t in the database, nor in any of the secondary literature - an item that undoubtedly will help build and change my thesis argument a great deal. Just because it’s not catalogued, doesn’t mean it’s not there.

Finally, a PhD can be all about movement. In one sense, physical; writing my thesis is a multi-locational affair. Originally I envisioned putting in the 9-5 hours in one or two archives, and then writing up in my bedroom. In reality, my project changed to a transatlantic study - and I have now visited at least nine different repositories that I can think of. Getting between all of these places means that I don’t just live alone, but I spend a lot of time travelling on my own too. For this reason it is also about movement in a second sense, emotional; it’s not just the ideas of my thesis that constantly change, but the type of person I am as well - in some ways it has yanked me into independence and seriousness. Well, at least sometimes.

What do YOU wish you’d known then than you know now?

Monday, 28 February 2011

Mad Men

The screening two episodes of of Mad Men is on Wednesday March 2 at Salisbury Road and the New History Lab session about Mad Men is on Friday 4 March usual time and venue. I'm really looking forward to it-it will be two great sessions.

For those of you who haven't been watching the series-the story of Mad Men is based round an New York advertising agency in the late fifties and sixties. the first season was set 1959-1960 and by the last season we were in 1965. The name Mad Men is a bit deceptive -Mad is short for Madison Avenue although the implications of the usual meaning of mad does have a resonance. The characters are well drawn and compelling and the series gives a myriad of interesting insights into American society at that time -where it had come from and where it was going.

One blurb has described it thus 'with its swirling cigarette smoke, martini lunches, skinny ties and tight pencil skirts, Mad Men is undoubtedly one of the most stylish, sexy and irresistible shows on television. But the series becomes even more absorbing once you dig deeper into its portrayal of the changing social mores of 1960and how these bear on the world of the Stirling Cooper ad agency'

Dont worry if you haven't been watching it on TV. Come to the screening on Wednesday at Salisbury Road. You'll enjoy it or if you don't you'll certainly find plenty think and talk about. See you there.