Academic Voiceover: Canagarajah’s Contribution Re-Writes a
Commonplace Assumption
In my last two posts, I chose to bring my outside interests
to bear on the texts we were reading for class.
I depart from that in this post because I wish to focus on one article
in particular, for it challenged some of my assumptions in productive ways.
Canagarajah’s A
Somewhat Legitimate and Very Peripheral Participation zeros in on a
compelling problem in the academy and elsewhere. Whose voice gets heard, by
whom, and for what purpose and/or audience? By extension, as a neophyte “n00bity” in
the academic publishing arena myself, I always wonder, how professional
scholars get articles and monographs published. {You know, the back-story, like
Canagarajah gives us.} Canagarajah narrates what can happen when people migrate
to the United States for an advanced degree and then return to their country of
origin (or choice as the case may be different depending upon the context).
In many ways and for various reasons, we all need to know
the inside-scoop as we think about professionalization and by implication the
“publish or perish” paradigm we will likely face should we be fortunate enough
to find gainful employment as scholars and teachers. If that employment is not
stateside, there are additional constraints. In a clever twist, Canagarajah
turns those constraints into assets. That is, on the one hand, he notes that
limited access to academic journals means that one has to focus on the top
journals—at least in Canagarajah’s instance. Necessarily, then, one’s attention
is directed to specific criteria. On the other hand, lack of access to
up-to-date, hi-tech equipment facilitates longer-term qualitative studies and
subsequent monographs.
I found Canagarajah’s article absolutely fascinating for a
number of reasons. First, to my knowledge, Canagarajah is right: academics
don’t usually discuss their processes of reading, writing, research, and
publication efforts. Second, that the idea of technological determinism so
prevalent in the U.S. academic context would lead to more monographs in
Canagarajah’s opinion shouldn’t have surprised me, but it did. The sustained
effort necessary for an individual monograph suggests to me long-term
institutional support. Clearly, Canagarajah disrupted a commonplace assumption that
I did not realize I had. {That’s just cool and I love when that happens!}
Third, I have a new interpretation of secondary or tertiary source citations. I
often wondered why academics chose not to go to primary source materials in
certain situations. Confirmation bias on my part assumed it was a kind of
academic hastiness or laziness that made people stray from the primary path to the
secondary sources. Sometimes, I know this is still the case, but Canagarajah
posits another reason: access to the sources due to limited resources. Of course, I have had a good understanding of this as a
non-traditional female student, but Canagarajah builds greater depth perception
into my field of view by explaining his experiences as a researcher in Sri
Lanka. What one does, or does not do,
with the access one has is telling.
The book that Canagarajah’s chapter is a part of looks
promising for other reasons as well. I’ve posted the cover here for anyone
interested in giving it a more thorough read.
Click below for the table of contents and more information.

I forgot to add another link to Canagarajah's blog about his experience as a TQ editor. In it he addresses his role and perspectives on WE use in academic contexts. The link is: http://www.personal.psu.edu/asc16/blogs/TQeditor/
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