The Monomyth of Postdoc Life
4 points
2 hours ago
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| randropy.com
| HN
foster_nyman
1 hour ago
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The Tolstoy riff is a great hook, and the “monomyth” framing works mostly because it’s really describing an incentive gradient. Early on, the environment is information-dense and socially novel, so you mistake energy for trajectory. Then the organisation’s needs assert themselves: teaching, outreach, grant theatre, internal coordination. None of that is (necessarily) evil, but it competes directly with the one thing the postdoc is implicitly there to convert into a future: publishable research. So, calibration isn’t a mood shift so much as a budget update. In Campbell's terms, the dragon is the calendar.

What I’d love to see (maybe as a follow-up) is the structural question: what policies reliably prevent the “service creep” phase from eating the research phase? I suspect the answer is boring and contractual, which is exactly why it might matter.

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