1. If you trust your advisor, ask him bluntly about the thesis committee the two of you envision--make sure there isn't someone on it that can be pointlessly difficult, slimy or ornery. Check to see if there is someone that needs to be given a particular nod or intellectual hook in order to happily sign off on a dissertation.
2. Give as many conference presentations as you possibly can in the two years
that follow your return to the US, during your write-up and post-defense as
well. BUT. Do not liberally distribute your conference papers. Hem and haw politely
when you're asked for one, especially by someone you don't know. Say you still
want to revise it, or you don't feel it is ready for circulation. This may actually
be true--it often is in my case: I frankly always feel terribly tentative after
every talk and presentation and just dont want to share what I wrote until
Im sure its worth circulating.) The only time you should give out
papers is if
You're required to.
You're honestly hoping for comments from someone you're seriously interested
in getting comments from.
You're trying to impress or ingratiate yourself with a senior person in your
field who has a good reputation.
Youre honestly very happy with the paper but dont intend to publish
it in any form: the conference paper is its terminal state.
You can afford to make lots of photocopies. It can add up pretty quickly if
youre passing out lots of papers and youre the one paying for the
photocopies of them.
The reason for this is that there are a very small but irritating coterie of
academics who collect vast numbers of papers from Ph.D candidates engaged in
their write-up who then artfully (so that it's not an overt instance of plagiarism)
rip-off aspects of the doctoral students research or arguments, knowing
that it's hard to prove when it's from a dissertation that hasn't yet appeared
in any kind of published form.
3. Form connections outside of your department and institution if you can, any
way possible. Serve on a committee; introduce yourself to significant figures
in your field; go to workshops and conferences and make a (polite) nuisance
of yourself during the question phase of a panel that includes someone you want
to meet; inveigle dinner invitations at conferences. Participate in listservs
or other online fora. ANYTHING. It's really important to network in this way,
both with other graduate students at other institutions who are in your field
and with senior figures in your field at other institutions.
4. Watch for postdocs that will be open the year after you have your Ph.D in
hand. This is the best way to develop a full social and intellectual network
and get teaching experience while also having the time to prepare your dissertation
as a manuscript.
5. Do not be a perfectionist with your dissertation. Write the sucker and damn
the torpedoes. Just make sure it's good enough for your committee. If you *can*
write it in such a way that it will require little work to make into a publishable
book, do it. For example, make the opening and inevitable "literature review"
as modular as possible and plan to just rip the entire thing out of the book
manuscript. If you embed your review of the relevant scholarship inside your
analysis, that may be more artful for the dissertation, but it's more of a pain
in the context of the manuscript, unless its really artful and worth keeping
even in the book.
6. Submit your dissertation as quickly as you can for publication. Don't screw
around. Unless it really is a serious mess, or a hideous, soul-destroying bore,
you might as well seek a publisher quickly. Because if you spend five years
revising and revising until it is absolutely perfect, and then submit it, I
promise you that the peer reviewers are going to demand changes anyway. It could
be utter perfection--you could be Jonathan Spence or Ferdnand Braudel--and peer
reviewers are still going to ask for revisions. So don't spend too long writing
and don't spend too long revising.
7. Apply for some jobs, but not too many, in the academic year during the (projected)
completion of your write-up. Apply only for the jobs you'd really like to have.
Don't pull out all the stops in terms of trying to get those jobs--don't cash
in all your patronage chips. The likelihood is that you'll be thrown out of
the competitive pool for almost all of those jobs on the grounds that you're
not finished, particularly if you don't have teaching experience beyond TA'ing
a course or two. But hopefully you'll get some screening interviews and possibly
even an on-campus interview. This is really valuable experience for the following
year, when you should be seriously competitive, when you need to do everything
you can to land a job.
8. Think carefully before applying for a job at an institution that you REALLY
don't want to be at. Academics can't afford to be picky, but here's the brutal
facts of life in your early career: if you get a job that pays poorly or has
a heavy teaching load or some other undesirable features at an institution you
don't care for, the clock will be ticking immediately on your long-term prospects.
You will need to get another job within four years or so or you might be in
risk of getting tenure at that institution. If you get tenure at a place you
don't like in a bad job situation, you may be there for life--the only way out
at that point is to publish a crapload of stuff in your field and schmooze like
mad on the conference circuit so that you establish a reputation that can survive
the negative impact of the institutional snobbery and hierarchy that consumes
the world of higher education. Keep in mind that being at a place with a bad
job situation, e.g., heavy teaching load and few if any sabbaticals, will make
it extremely hard to do what you need to do in order to get out. On the other
hand, also keep in mind that the more competitive you are, the less interested
such institutions are in you--partly because they know the facts as I've just
laid them out, and they know that if they hire you, you'll either be applying
for other jobs ten minutes later or you'll get stuck there and be a hateful
grumpus about it for the rest of your life.
9. On the other hand, give up all hope that you will be able to live in a community
or place that you have a preference for. Your life is now a complete crapshoot
as far as that goes. When a decent job comes up, it doesn't matter if it's in
Alabama or Alaska, Newark or Tuscaloosa: you have to apply for it and take it
if you get it. If you have a significant other, be sure they understand this.
If you have a significant other who is also an academic, get ready for some
serious pain in the next six to seven years: the likelihood is that one of the
two of you is going to find your career on the backburner. In this one case,
you may want to limit yourselves (both of you) to applying for jobs in areas
that are dense in colleges and universities.
10. Take care in preparing your dossier. A missing letter can kill you. A letter
from someone who doesn't really know you can hurt you: because most letters
of recommendation are unbelievably hyperbolic, even slightly moderate or cursory
praise tends to get picked up as "suspicious". (This is not true for
letters of reference in general, just for letters for graduate students for
academic jobs or grants). Make sure you don't make your c.v. too long or too
short. Don't put too much of your written material in--in fact, I wouldn't send
a writing sample unless the job application specifically requests it. You'll
get asked later on if they want to see some of your work. (Exception: if you
have off-prints of a journal article you've already published, put one in the
packet for the competitive jobs you'd really like to land.) Do describe the
basic argument and "hook" of your main research project in your cover
letter, but keep it short and sexy. Have several trusted friends and advisors,
including at least one non-academic, read your cover letters: specifically ask
them to have their bullshit radar turned on. I've read cover letters that have
badly hurt candidates, where they come off either as terribly insecure, impossibly
perfunctory or as supercilious, arrogant assholes. Hell, I've probably written
cover letters like that.
11. Read job ads carefully, and if it's a job you really want, call in your
network of spies to gain more information on what the department in question
is like. Write a custom version of your cover letter with that in mind, but
do NOT set out to deceive people or bluff in some fashion. There's a particular
odor about a candidate who is playacting a role with the intent of pleasing
people. You'll get further on the market if you're honest without being stupid.
Don't go out of your way to wave a red flag at a department or person who is
interviewing you, but don't try to be an amateur Kremlinologist either. Most
of the time you'll be wrong, and even when you're right, it probably doesn't
help that much.
12. Keep in mind two things. First, the psychic toll of the academic job market
is extremely intense. It's highly seasonal (August-December is the season of
intense activity and high hopes; January-March is where your life either comes
together or falls apart; March-July is a desperate hunt for something to keep
you going next year if you didn't get the job you wanted or any job at all)
and then it starts all over again. You will want to give up even after just
one spin of the wheel. Dont. Second, don't forget that the previous advice
notwithstanding, 9 times out of 10 if you didn't get a job that you wanted and
got close to (say, on-campus interview close) it probably has nothing to do
with you or your qualifications, or your performance in interviews. In fact,
notoriously, in many searches, the best candidate doesn't get the job, because
two or more factions in a department disagree so doggedly and are so afraid
of changing the balance of power between them, they end up picking a safe mediocrity
as a compromise.
13. Do your best to get something in print during the year you're doing your
write-up. Though normally I hate this, you should send off the best chapter
from your dissertation in progress, the one that stands best alone but also
shows off your work to best effect. Pick a journal that is well-regarded in
your field but one that you have a reasonable shot at getting published in as
an ABD.
14. If you get a chance to adjunct a single course at a somewhat decent university
or college besides your own, do so during the year you're writing up. Do NOT
adjunct more than one course, because that will slow the pace of your writing.
Do NOT plan to have adjuncting actually provide you a reasonable living wage:
the pay and benefits suck. If you have a significant other to support you through
your writing-up, you're in good shape. If you don't, find one. Or be really
nice to your parents or your weird uncle Jake who is going to die any day now.
The ability to claim teaching experience helps a lot on the market. After the
dissertation is done, if you do not have a full-time post, take any adjunct
opportunities that present themselves, whether it's a single course or a three-year
full-time contract.
15. Sketch out some sample syllabi--a survey in your main field and a couple
of topical classes, maybe one fairly meat-and-potatoes and two sexy dream courses.
Don't include these syllabi unless you're asked for them, but it will help a
tremendous amount in interviews to be talking about specific pedagogical plans
and teaching aspirations. Don't get too dreamy or goofy in your enthusiasm for
teaching if you're interviewing for a research university position, though.
16. 'Cold' cover letters make sense only when they're sent to institutions in
your immediate geographical area, wherever you're living, that might have a
need for adjuncts, and even then I'd say only less selective institutions. Probably
more useful is making sure that the specialists in your field at local institutions
know you're around, and the best way to do that is informal--if you were living
in Chicago, for example, I would go to workshops, seminars and lectures at U
Chicago , Northwestern, U. of Illinois and gradually let it be known that you're
around. When department chairs are trying to fill a hole or spend some extra
money for replacements, they usually don't open up the file full of cold cover
letters, most of which come from burn-outs, cranks and the truly desperate,
they call up their colleagues in the field they're trying to fill and ask if
they know of anyone living in the area. Make sure your advisors and your department
chair in your graduate program know where you are if you're no longer in their
area, and make sure they know if you're in serious need of a job, any
job.