(Episode 158) How to Turn Your PhD Into a Book?
Episode title: How to Turn Your PhD Into a Book
Podcast: Research Culture Uncovered
Host: Heledd Jarosz-Griffiths (Researcher Development Advisor, University of Leeds)
Episode overview
Turning a PhD into a book is rarely a straightforward process. It’s not simply about rewriting or revising a thesis — it involves rethinking purpose, audience, and identity as a researcher.
In this episode, Heledd speaks with Dr Hilary Potter about the challenges and opportunities involved in transforming doctoral research into a book. From the emotional weight of returning to high-stakes work, to developing confidence and recognising your own expertise, the conversation explores what it really means to “turn” a PhD into something new.
Hilary also shares insights into her activity-based approach, the role of creativity and writing by hand, and how her portfolio career — including teaching, translation, and periods of precarity — has shaped both her thinking and her book.
Together, this episode highlights how developing authorial agency can shift not only how researchers write, but how they see themselves and their place within (and beyond) academia.
Featured contributor
Dr Hilary Potter — Project Officer, CERIC (Centre for Employment Relations, Innovation and Change) University of Leeds. Academic background in German Studies, with experience across teaching, research, and roles inside and outside higher education. Author of How to Turn Your PhD into a Book: A Pocket Guide (Peter Lang, 2024).
🔗 LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dr-hilary-potter-1495262b
🦋 Bluesky: @hilarypotterphd.bsky.social
Key themes explored
• The challenge of reconceptualising a PhD beyond its original purpose
• Why turning a PhD into a book is not simply rewriting or revising
• The shift from being supervised to working independently
• Developing authorial agency and recognising expertise
• Creative and tactile approaches to writing (including writing by hand)
• The influence of portfolio careers, teaching, and precarity on academic work
• Writing for different audiences and purposes
Memorable ideas
• A PhD is written to be examined — a book is written to be read
• Distance from your thesis can be essential before returning to it
• Creativity and physical engagement (writing, drawing, mapping ideas) can unlock thinking
• You don’t need permission to be the expert in your own work
• Research careers are rarely linear — and that can be a strength
Related episode
The Art of Saying No: Power, Permission, and Research Culture
This earlier episode explores how agency, confidence, and decision-making are shaped by power, culture, and career stage in research environments — themes that connect closely to this conversation around authorial agency and recognising your expertise.
🔗 Listen here: The Art of Saying No [https://player.captivate.fm/episode/dd1ab930-2982-4fed-9510-bf7aca794ad1/]
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Want to contribute to a future episode?
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