While journal articles are just âfishing trips with friends at the local pondâ, monographs are âthree-year voyages from which no one returns unchangedâ.
That is the view of a respondent to an international survey of more than 5,000 researchers in the social sciences and humanities. Despite much talk about the death of the monograph, they make it clear how central it is to their work, their careers and even their identities, and how it is likely to remain so.
Published jointly by long-term rivals Cambridge University Press and Oxford University Press, reports that â91Â per cent of respondents considered monographs âextremelyâ or âveryâ important to the overall body of knowledge in their subject areaâ. Although the figure for those working in the humanities was even higher (95Â per cent), 87Â per cent of social scientists were in agreement with them. Researchers in religion, history, philosophy and literature âvalued monographs slightly more than journal articlesâ, while experts in disciplines such as law, politics and modern languages âvalued journal articles marginally more than monographsâ. And what is true now looked likely to remain true: â83Â per cent of respondents anticipate that the monograph, in its current form, is âextremelyâ or âveryâ likely to have value for their work/research in 10Â yearsâ timeâ.
Alongside the crucial importance of monographs for career-building, some respondents stressed that such works had shaped their thinking. One early career researcher claimed that he or she âmight not have started to study what IÂ finally did since monographs open up worlds to the reader that other formats canât do the same wayâ. Asked to give detail about what the possible loss of the monograph might mean, a mid-career researcher noted that their field âwould move more quickly, but would lose a significant amount of genuinely field-shaping, provocative, immensely important literatureâ.
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Another argued that humanities scholarship ârequires a venue to make a deep, sustained engagement with evidence, the scholarly record, and argument. If the monograph did not exist it would be necessary to invent itâŠthe monograph can only go away if the humanities go away, which some people wish to make happen, but they will not succeed within 10 years. I hope they never succeed.â
Respondents also pointed to ways that the monograph needed to be adapted to the times.
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Some expressed a desire for âa mid-length category (eg, 30,000-60,000 words) between journal articles and monographsâ or âcriticised the double-blind peer review systemâ because they âfelt limited by not being able to react to reviewersâ commentsâ. Others âsuggested adding supplementary material (eg, videos, images, maps, interactive elements) to the book onlineâ. One late-career researcher commented that publishers were ânot keeping up with research trends, for example, the visual turn in history writingâ.
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