Careers, page A29
Copyright 2010
The Chronicle of Higher Education
September 6, 201
10 Tips on How to Write Less Badly
By Michael C. Munger
Most academics, including administrators, spend much of our time
writing. But we aren't as good at it as we should be. I have never
understood why our trade values, but rarely teaches, nonfiction
writing.
In my nearly 30 years at universities, I have seen a lot of very
talented people fail because they couldn't, or didn't, write. And some
much less talented people (I see one in the mirror every morning) have
done OK because they learned how to write.
It starts in graduate school. There is a real transformation,
approaching an inversion, as people switch from taking courses to
writing. Many of the graduate students who were stars in the classroom
during the first two years--the people everyone admired and looked up
to--suddenly aren't so stellar anymore. And a few of the marginal
students--the ones who didn't care that much about pleasing the
professors by reading every page of every assignment--are suddenly
sending their own papers off to journals, getting published, and
transforming themselves into professional scholars.
The difference is not complicated. It's writing.
Rachel Toor and other writers on these pages have talked about how
hard it is to write well, and of course that's true. Fortunately, the
standards of writing in most disciplines are so low that you don't
need to write well. What I have tried to produce below are 10 tips on
scholarly nonfiction writing that might help people write less badly.
JWW note: The author, a professor in political science,
is writing to beginning academics [his audience] with the aim of
improving their ‘scholarly nonfiction writing’ to the
level of a successful academic. That is not the exactly the aim
of this course. But it is an excellent start.
The
online version allowed readers comments. Interesting some didn't
read it carefully enough to understand his aim.
See What a good coach does as an effective
writing by someone who cared enough to do it well.
1. Writing is an exercise. You get better and faster with practice. If
you were going to run a marathon a year from now, would you wait for
months and then run 26 miles cold? No, you would build up slowly,
running most days. You might start on the flats and work up to more
demanding and difficult terrain. To become a writer, write. Don't wait
for that book manuscript or that monster external-review report to
work on your writing.
2. Set goals based on output, not input. "I will work for three hours"
is a delusion; "I will type three double-spaced pages" is a goal.
After you write three pages, do something else. Prepare for class,
teach, go to meetings, whatever. If later in the day you feel like
writing some more, great. But if you don't, then at least you wrote
something.
3. Find a voice; don't just “get published.” James Buchanan won a
Nobel in economics in 1986. One of the questions he asks job
candidates is: "What are you writing that will be read 10 years from
now? What about 100 years from now?" Someone once asked me that
question, and it is pretty intimidating. And embarrassing, because
most of us don't think that way. We focus on "getting published" as if
it had nothing to do with writing about ideas or arguments.
Paradoxically, if all you are trying to do is "get published," you may
not publish very much. It's easier to write when you're interested in
what you're writing about.
4. Give yourself time. Many smart people tell themselves pathetic lies
like, "I do my best work at the last minute." Look: It's not true. No
one works better under pressure. Sure, you are a smart person. But if
you are writing about a profound problem, why would you think that you
can make an important contribution off the top of your head in the
middle of the night just before the conference?
Writers sit at their desks for hours, wrestling with ideas. They ask
questions, talk with other smart people over drinks or dinner, go on
long walks. And then write a whole bunch more. Don't worry that what
you write is not very good and isn't immediately usable. You get ideas
when you write; you don't just write down ideas.
The articles and books that will be read decades from now were written
by men and women sitting at a desk and forcing themselves to translate
profound ideas into words and then to let those words lead them to
even more ideas. Writing can be magic, if you give yourself time,
because you can produce in the mind of some other person, distant from
you in space or even time, an image of the ideas that exist in only
your mind at this one instant.
5. Everyone's unwritten work is brilliant. And the more unwritten it
is, the more brilliant it is. We have all met those glib, intimidating
graduate students or faculty members. They are at their most dangerous
holding a beer in one hand and a cigarette in the other, in some bar
or at an office party. They have all the answers. They can tell you
just what they will write about, and how great it will be.
Years pass, and they still have the same pat, 200-word answer to "What
are you working on?" It never changes, because they are not actually
working on anything, except that one little act.
You, on the other hand, actually are working on something, and it
keeps evolving. You don't like the section you just finished, and you
are not sure what will happen next. When someone asks, "What are you
working on?," you stumble, because it is hard to explain. The smug guy
with the beer and the cigarette? He's a poseur and never actually
writes anything. So he can practice his pat little answer endlessly,
through hundreds of beers and thousands of cigarettes. Don't be
fooled: You are the winner here. When you are actually writing, and
working as hard as you should be if you want to succeed, you will feel
inadequate, stupid, and tired. If you don't feel like that, then you
aren't working hard enough.
6. Pick a puzzle. Portray, or even conceive, of your work as an answer
to a puzzle. There are many interesting types of puzzles:
* "X and Y start with same assumptions but reach opposing
conclusions. How?"
* "Here are three problems that all seem different. Surprisingly,
all are the same problem, in disguise. I'll tell you why."
* "Theory predicts [something]. But we observe [something else]. Is
the theory wrong, or is there some other factor we have left out?"
Don't stick too closely to those formulas, but they are helpful in
presenting your work to an audience, whether that audience is composed
of listeners at a lecture or readers of an article.
7. Write, then squeeze the other things in. Put your writing ahead of
your other work. I happen to be a "morning person," so I write early
in the day. Then I spend the rest of my day teaching, having meetings,
or doing paperwork. You may be a "night person" or something in
between. Just make sure you get in the habit of reserving your most
productive time for writing. Don't do it as an afterthought or tell
yourself you will write when you get a big block of time. Squeeze the
other things in; the writing comes first.
8. Not all of your thoughts are profound. Many people get frustrated
because they can't get an analytical purchase on the big questions
that interest them. Then they don't write at all. So start small. The
wonderful thing is that you may find that you have traveled quite a
long way up a mountain, just by keeping your head down and putting one
writing foot ahead of the other for a long time. It is hard to refine
your questions, define your terms precisely, or know just how your
argument will work until you have actually written it all down.
9. Your most profound thoughts are often wrong. Or, at least, they are
not completely correct. Precision in asking your question, or posing
your puzzle, will not come easily if the question is hard.
I always laugh to myself when new graduate students think they know
what they want to work on and what they will write about for their
dissertations. Nearly all of the best scholars are profoundly changed
by their experiences in doing research and writing about it. They
learn by doing, and sometimes what they learn is that they were wrong.
10. Edit your work, over and over. Have other people look at it. One
of the great advantages of academe is that we are mostly all in this
together, and we all know the terrors of that blinking cursor on a
blank background. Exchange papers with peers or a mentor, and when you
are sick of your own writing, reciprocate by reading their work. You
need to get over a fear of criticism or rejection. Nobody's first
drafts are good. The difference between a successful scholar and a
failure need not be better writing. It is often more editing.
If you have trouble writing, then you just haven't written enough.
Writing lots of pages has always been pretty easy for me. I could
never get a job being only a writer, though, because I still don't
write well. But by thinking about these tips, and trying to follow
them myself, I have gotten to the point where I can make writing work
for me and my career.
Michael C. Munger is chairman of political science at Duke University,
a position he has held since 2000.