-
Recent Posts
Archives
Meta
- abstracts academic blogging academic book academic life academic writing argument authority in writing blogging books conclusion conference papers crafting writing discourse dissertation doctoral education doctoral research early career researchers epistemology Europe introduction journal knowledge production literature review mess methods chapter note-taking ontology peer review PhD PhD by publication powerpoint publication plan public engagement publishing readership reading refereeing reflection rejection research education research methods research plan research project scholarly identity signposts theory thesis time voice writing
Twitter Updates
- not all literature ‘reviews’ are the same wp.me/p1GJk8-xO 4 hours ago
- RT @NHopUts: 10 easy ways to make sure you have no publications when you finish your phd & forever after wp.me/pLpEp-7i #phdchat #e… 16 hours ago
- Last plug for my post on why journals reject papers. ow.ly/lfR0o #acwri #phdchat #gradchat #ecrchat 18 hours ago
Top Posts & Pages
- seven reasons why journals reject papers
- not all literature ‘reviews’ are the same
- writing the thesis
- writing for journals
- oh no, someone did the research before me...
- early onset satisfaction – a bad thing for writing and writers
- about me
- a Foucauldian approach to discourse analysis
- what not to do in a thesis conclusion, part one: christmas present five
- academic writing
Tag Archives: John Bunyan
what do words want?
In writing workshops I often come across people with conference and nearly final draft papers that they do not seem able to finish. The prospect of sending them out for review and possible publication just seems too hard, perhaps it’s … Continue reading
Posted in Margaret Atwood, reader, readership, reading, text, the page, words, writing
Tagged John Bunyan, Margaret Atwood, Pat Thomson, reader, words
1 Comment