ABSTRACT

Across disciplinary borders, clarity is taken for granted as a cardinal virtue of communication in contemporary academia. But what is clarity, how is it practised in writing across disciplinary borders and how does it affect our ways of researching and thinking? This book explores such questions by scrutinising the ideal of clarity beyond its apparently self-evident value. Through a multi-methodological empirical analysis of the ideal of clarity, the author offers a sketch of what is termed ‘the poetics of clarity’, which is unfolded as a field of tension with important implications for sentence formation, authorial positioning and textual organisation. By way of a series of reflections on the possible consequences of this for thinking, this volume also explores the parts of knowledge production that may be marginalised, especially poetic language use, biases, interests and contexts, multi-dimensional arguments and errors. Revealing a positivist bias and a regime of high-speed consumption that characterise what, in certain regards, might be considered a productive space for knowledge production, Writing and Thinking in Contemporary Academia will appeal to scholars with interests in the sociology of knowledge, continental philosophy, the philosophy of science and academic writing.

chapter |9 pages

Introductory remarks

The question of clarity

part I|56 pages

The poetics of clarity in contemporary academic writing

chapter 1|13 pages

The idealised plane of poetics

Core concepts and ideals

chapter 2|14 pages

The formation of sentences

chapter 3|13 pages

Researchers-in-the-texts

chapter 4|14 pages

Textual structures of research articles

part II|55 pages

Reflections on the consequences for thinking

chapter 9|9 pages

Thinking the limits and the limits for thinking

The inherent positivist bias

chapter 10|9 pages

Clarity

A potential acceleration of thinking?