Reading On Intellectual Craftsmanship, by Sociologist C. Wright Mills (wikipedia), was very helpful for me as I am in the process of determining what I am in graduate school to accomplish. In this piece, Mills sets out to document and explain in a simple and inspiring manner his own working process. There are several points that I found especially compelling and relevant to my own work.
Life=Work Idea of a "social scientist" ones life and work are deeply interconnected
bringing together personal experience with intellectual pursuits.
Surround yourself with your subject (and those interested in your subject). Doing things in your life that will lead to thinking well along the lines of your work.
Keeping a file to conserve energy and capture fringe
thoughts, and small snippets of ideas that once noted may lead to
systematic understandings. Keeping my own "intellectual enterprise organized and under control"
has been a major task and exploration for me the past decade. I am looking
to school to help me make something of it that is greater than the sum
of its parts.I used to keep actual paper files in college but then moved so many
times that the file cabinet was more cumbersome than helpful so I
turned to the internet for that purpose.
Being overwhelmed by so many ideas - yes, all the time!
Creating a work/research/life processes to help deal with this issue and make meaning from mania.
To trust and utilize ones experience while also being skeptical of
how it colors your own perceptions - building an "ambiguous confidence"
which can then be justified through the documentation/file.
The file is a way of developing self reflexive habits
To engage in "controlled experience" - Love this!
Inviting Imagination
"Sociological Imagination consists largely of capacity to shift from one perspective to another..in the process building up an adequate view of total society and its components"
A technician is often too precisely trained to see outside of their practice. A social scientist is one unafraid to combine the seemingly disparate or random, with a playfulness of mind and a fierce drive to make sense of the world. "to a technician, new ways may sen loose or sloppy but the social scientist must cling to such vague images and notions, if they are yours, and you must work them out. For it is in such forms that original ideas, if any almost always appear"
Not becoming to rigidly committed to one plan from the start. re-arranging your file to find new connections. having a playfulness towards language. considering extremes. "Let your mind become a moving prism, catching light from as many angles as possible."
Voice
Mills warns against alienating yourself or clouding the meaning of your work in academic prose. Not to fear being considered pedantic or journalistic in style. Write to be readable and tell a story. Focus on your audience and voice. Avoid fetishism of technique.
In closing, he reminds the aspiring social scientist to keep perspective, not to study one milieu after another but to look at the social structures in which all of these milieu are organized.
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