Six years out of a PhD in English literature, I鈥檓 in the third and final year of a teaching contract at a prestigious UK university. The contract, I鈥檓 assured, won鈥檛 be extended, but at any rate I鈥檓 running out of willpower to go on in academia.
I currently manage my family life around a聽weekly 400-mile round trip in my car. The goal was always to find work closer to home, but that work never materialised. Since starting my current job, I鈥檝e only seen three permanent posts in my field advertised; I applied for all three but was shortlisted for none. Some of these positions, I later discovered, attracted well over 100 applicants. I鈥檝e only made it to three interviews in total since finishing my PhD, including the one for my current role.
The job market in English literature has been miserable for as long as most can remember, but it seems to be hitting rock bottom as a result of a drop in overseas students and other knock-on effects of Brexit and the pandemic, as well as frozen tuition fees and a declining uptake of GCSE and A-level literature courses. In addition, subjects like English are increasingly frowned upon by a government waging war on 鈥渓ow-earning鈥 degrees, and whole departments are currently threatened with closure or are quietly renewing pandemic-era freezes on hiring.
Academia doesn鈥檛 owe anyone a living, but I do feel short-changed. When I began my doctorate, I was told that I鈥檇 need at least two articles published if I wanted to land a job. By the time I submitted, that had been revised to needing to have made moves towards publishing my thesis as a book. But the repeated insistences that this would boost my luck in the job hunt have not been borne out. When you apply for an 鈥渆ntry level鈥 job, you are increasingly up against mid-career ship-jumpers; in that scenario, there鈥檚 no conceivable number of publications, hours of teaching or anything else that will definitively boost your fortunes. You might well move up the queue, but you鈥檙e still two-thirds of the way back.
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Senior colleagues recall their own 鈥渨ilderness years鈥, bouncing between teaching posts and institutions to make ends meet, with something approaching fondness. Such tales are told to reassure us newbies that established academics know only too well what it was like waiting for that permanent post, but that our time, too, will come if we only persevere a little longer. I鈥檓 sure that no one wishes us anything but kindness when they give us such advice, but those with secure contracts really don鈥檛 seem to realise how bad things have become unless they鈥檝e recently been on hiring committees themselves.
I鈥檓 not suggesting that senior colleagues should be telling us all to look for work outside academia, but it would certainly help if that idea weren鈥檛 treated as dishonourable, if not downright unthinkable. When I tell colleagues I鈥檓 thinking about quitting, responses tend to suggest I鈥檓 being melodramatic, running along the lines of 鈥渃ome on now, it鈥檚 not that bad鈥. At the more extreme end, you鈥檙e looked at as if you鈥檝e just said something deeply offensive or you were dying.
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An insecurely employed colleague of mine recently told her mentor she was considering non-university employment. He grinned at her and told her to keep at the job hunt for now 鈥 after all, he said, all his previous mentees had landed academic jobs. The mentor meant well, but such advice is plain toxic. It tells the candidate that if they don鈥檛 land a job, they鈥檙e an abnormality and a failure.
This widespread reluctance to think outside the profession is a symptom not so much of academics鈥 supposed lack of transferable skills as of how academics narrate their trade to themselves and to one another. We learn to treat academia as a calling rather than a job, and we justify our chosen paths by denigrating roads not taken. But while no early-career academic would make the concessions we do if we didn鈥檛 think academia were a great career, we should not regard work outside academia as worth less than work within it.
No one at the level of teaching staff and researchers is in a position, individually, to change the state of employment overnight. But everyone must realise that, these days, even a term鈥檚 worth of teaching can鈥檛 readily be found (and won鈥檛 be properly paid). It is simply unrealistic to tell everyone in the job market today that it鈥檚 all just a matter of time and tenacity. The kindest thing, now, would be for the advice to catch up with that reality.
Chris Townsend is a fellow in English at Christ鈥檚 College, University of Cambridge.
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