Publish Not Perish

Rethinking the Academic Conclusion | Ep. 36

10 min · 23. april 2026
episode Rethinking the Academic Conclusion | Ep. 36 cover

Beskrivelse

In today’s episode, I talk about why academic conclusions so often feel flat to write and what shifts when we stop treating them as simple summaries. For a long time, I thought the conclusion’s job was just to restate what I had already said, and that made it feel tedious and lifeless. Here, I offer a different way of thinking about it: a strong conclusion doesn’t just summarize the manuscript. It synthesizes the argument, helps the reader see what the pieces add up to, and makes the stakes of the work clearer. I also explore how a conclusion can open outward without becoming inflated or vague. That might mean showing what your analysis lets us understand differently, clarifying the broader implications of your argument, or pointing toward questions that emerge from the work in an organic and grounded way. I share how writing the coda to my book helped me see conclusions differently, not as administrative cleanup, but as a genuine space for reflection, interpretation, and extension. If conclusions have felt dull, frustrating, or difficult to pin down, I hope this episode gives you a more interesting and more useful frame. Get the Support You Need to Write, Publish, and Flourish If you’re craving more support with your writing, here are a few ways we can work together: Writing Coaching [https://substack.com/redirect/23e7a3c0-0960-4f7e-8126-5f4d187c962b?j=eyJ1IjoiM3MxOXE1In0.K7HYXy4_5RiIZ7ESNcz1kyGRGjMdKgTa2kn9CBobmco]—For scholars who want structure, accountability, and a sustainable writing practice that actually works in real life. https://www.jennmcclearen.com/coaching [https://www.jennmcclearen.com/coaching] Developmental Editing [https://substack.com/redirect/ac93e96d-a057-415e-a30f-5628d6fe5363?j=eyJ1IjoiM3MxOXE1In0.K7HYXy4_5RiIZ7ESNcz1kyGRGjMdKgTa2kn9CBobmco]—When you need an expert pair of eyes on the argument, structure, or clarity of your manuscript. https://www.jennmcclearen.com/editing [https://www.jennmcclearen.com/editing] Book Coaching [https://substack.com/redirect/23218542-2b68-436c-beaa-578f2a5a8914?j=eyJ1IjoiM3MxOXE1In0.K7HYXy4_5RiIZ7ESNcz1kyGRGjMdKgTa2kn9CBobmco]—Six months of coaching + developmental editing to help you make meaningful progress on your manuscript. https://www.jennmcclearen.com/bookcoaching [https://www.jennmcclearen.com/bookcoaching]  Get full access to Publish Not Perish at www.publishnotperish.net/subscribe [https://www.publishnotperish.net/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

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41 Episoder

episode Why Your Book's “So What” Feels So Vulnerable | Ep. 40 cover

Why Your Book's “So What” Feels So Vulnerable | Ep. 40

Most of us know our work needs a strong significance claim, but actually writing one can feel surprisingly difficult. I doubt that’s simply because writers don’t understand their projects. Often, it’s because we’ve been trained as scholars to be careful, qualified, and intellectually humble, while the “so what” asks us to do something much more exposed: to say, clearly and confidently, that our work matters. In today’s episode, I’ll walk through why significance often crystallizes late in the writing process, why vagueness can feel protective, and how to think about the “so what” as something your book makes possible rather than just a gap it fills. My hope is that this episode helps you stop treating an elusive significance claim as evidence that something is wrong with your project. Sometimes the "so what" is already there, threaded through the work, waiting for you to see it clearly enough to name it and feel confident enough to claim it. Get full access to Publish Not Perish at www.publishnotperish.net/subscribe [https://www.publishnotperish.net/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

I går8 min
episode What Lifting Heavy Things Taught Me About Writing | Ep. 39 cover

What Lifting Heavy Things Taught Me About Writing | Ep. 39

In today’s episode, I’m reflecting on what a year of lifting heavy weights has taught me about writing. When I first started working with genuinely heavy weights, I realized that the hard part was not only physical. My brain often told me to stop before my body had actually reached its limit. That experience in the gym has an uncanny resemblance to the moment in writing when an argument gets difficult, the structure will not quite settle, and suddenly email, footnotes, or “just a little more reading” starts to look very appealing. I talk about the difference between real rest and avoidance and why both matter for academic writers. Rest is essential and it is part of how growth happens. But sometimes what looks like rest is actually a retreat from the intellectual discomfort that makes our work stronger. I also reflect on consistency, not as writing every day or meeting some punishing productivity standard, but as the practice of returning to the gym, to the page, and to the hard thing that slowly builds progress over time. All of this is to say that you can do hard things, and it is the act of doing those hard things that makes the magic happen. Related Content https://www.publishnotperish.net/p/writing-should-be-hard?utm_source=publication-search [https://www.publishnotperish.net/p/writing-should-be-hard?utm_source=publication-search] https://www.publishnotperish.net/p/sticking-with-your-writing-when-the?utm_source=publication-search [https://www.publishnotperish.net/p/sticking-with-your-writing-when-the?utm_source=publication-search] Get full access to Publish Not Perish at www.publishnotperish.net/subscribe [https://www.publishnotperish.net/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

14. mai 202610 min
episode You Don’t Have to Start with an Outline Either | Ep. 38 cover

You Don’t Have to Start with an Outline Either | Ep. 38

In my newsletter this week, I explained why I almost never start any sort of writing project with an outline. It’s simply because I’m much more of an explorer-writer than an architect-writer: I usually need to move through the material before I can see the structure. Architect-writers begin with the blueprint, the chapter map, and the planned sequence of ideas. Explorer-writers need to write fragments, follow associations, talk through examples, or spend time with one part of the project before the larger argument becomes visible. You can read more about the distinctions I’m making here: If you’re an explorer-writer too, common academic writing advice can make you feel like you’re doing everything wrong, especially when that advice begins and ends with “make an outline.” But struggling to outline at the beginning doesn’t necessarily mean you’re avoiding the work, lacking structure, or failing as a writer. It may mean that writing is how you discover the argument before you can organize it. In this episode, I discuss a method for still producing structured academic prose without beginning with an outline. Academic writing still needs to become generous to the reader. Your reader needs a path through the problem, the evidence, the intervention, and the stakes. But the process that helps you find the argument is not always the same as the structure that helps someone else follow it. So, I walk through a more useful process for explorer-writers: start where there is traction, write to discover, harvest what appears, cluster before sequencing, name the emerging argument, build the reader’s path, and use a reverse outline to refine the structure. You don’t have to begin as the architect. You can instead begin as the explorer, learning the shape of the terrain as you go. Get full access to Publish Not Perish at www.publishnotperish.net/subscribe [https://www.publishnotperish.net/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

7. mai 202614 min
episode Why Saying No Still Feels Impossible After Tenure | Ep. 37 cover

Why Saying No Still Feels Impossible After Tenure | Ep. 37

Over the last two weeks, I’ve been interrogating the hustle culture embedded in the sprint toward tenure and the broader culture of busyness in academia. You can access those posts here: Today’s episode asks what happens after the tenure sprint is supposedly over. The promise of tenure is that the pressure will ease, the finish line will hold, and a more spacious academic life will finally become possible. But for many scholars, the habits formed during the pre-tenure years do not simply disappear. When you spend years working inside ambiguity, trying to discern what will count as “enough,” overproduction can start to feel like the safest answer. Saying yes becomes more than a habit; it becomes part of how you prove you are serious, generous, collegial, and deserving. I also look at why advice about “just saying no” often misses the deeper problem. Not everyone has the same freedom to set boundaries without being judged, penalized, or read as insufficiently committed. Service, mentoring, diversity work, and emotional labor often fall unevenly on scholars whose belonging has already been made conditional. I want to hold both truths together: individual strategies for saying no can matter, especially as acts of self-preservation, but they are not enough on their own. The deeper work is building departments and institutions where labor is transparent, shared, and recognized and where exhaustion is no longer mistaken for commitment. Get full access to Publish Not Perish at www.publishnotperish.net/subscribe [https://www.publishnotperish.net/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

30. april 202617 min
episode Rethinking the Academic Conclusion | Ep. 36 cover

Rethinking the Academic Conclusion | Ep. 36

In today’s episode, I talk about why academic conclusions so often feel flat to write and what shifts when we stop treating them as simple summaries. For a long time, I thought the conclusion’s job was just to restate what I had already said, and that made it feel tedious and lifeless. Here, I offer a different way of thinking about it: a strong conclusion doesn’t just summarize the manuscript. It synthesizes the argument, helps the reader see what the pieces add up to, and makes the stakes of the work clearer. I also explore how a conclusion can open outward without becoming inflated or vague. That might mean showing what your analysis lets us understand differently, clarifying the broader implications of your argument, or pointing toward questions that emerge from the work in an organic and grounded way. I share how writing the coda to my book helped me see conclusions differently, not as administrative cleanup, but as a genuine space for reflection, interpretation, and extension. If conclusions have felt dull, frustrating, or difficult to pin down, I hope this episode gives you a more interesting and more useful frame. Get the Support You Need to Write, Publish, and Flourish If you’re craving more support with your writing, here are a few ways we can work together: Writing Coaching [https://substack.com/redirect/23e7a3c0-0960-4f7e-8126-5f4d187c962b?j=eyJ1IjoiM3MxOXE1In0.K7HYXy4_5RiIZ7ESNcz1kyGRGjMdKgTa2kn9CBobmco]—For scholars who want structure, accountability, and a sustainable writing practice that actually works in real life. https://www.jennmcclearen.com/coaching [https://www.jennmcclearen.com/coaching] Developmental Editing [https://substack.com/redirect/ac93e96d-a057-415e-a30f-5628d6fe5363?j=eyJ1IjoiM3MxOXE1In0.K7HYXy4_5RiIZ7ESNcz1kyGRGjMdKgTa2kn9CBobmco]—When you need an expert pair of eyes on the argument, structure, or clarity of your manuscript. https://www.jennmcclearen.com/editing [https://www.jennmcclearen.com/editing] Book Coaching [https://substack.com/redirect/23218542-2b68-436c-beaa-578f2a5a8914?j=eyJ1IjoiM3MxOXE1In0.K7HYXy4_5RiIZ7ESNcz1kyGRGjMdKgTa2kn9CBobmco]—Six months of coaching + developmental editing to help you make meaningful progress on your manuscript. https://www.jennmcclearen.com/bookcoaching [https://www.jennmcclearen.com/bookcoaching]  Get full access to Publish Not Perish at www.publishnotperish.net/subscribe [https://www.publishnotperish.net/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

23. april 202610 min