In our newest "how can we help you?" thread, a reader writes:
I am an early graduate student with two perhaps controversial questions, one more empirical and one normative. The first is: would it hurt (or even destroy) one’s chances on the job market if they were to pursue a part-time career in sex work while in grad school (specifically, starting an OnlyFans)? The second is: if yes, are such norms justified?
When I think of older academics on a search committee (lets broadly say “baby boomers,” particularly those with anti-porn sentiments), my intuitions tell me if someone were to find out it would likely be disqualifying. When I think of people like Amia Srinivasan and many younger philosophers, I feel like it might not be a big issue at all (but I’m really far from sure).
Finally, part of me is wondering whether I should even make decisions based on how they might affect my chances on the job market. If my chances of succeeding are already so low, part of me feels like I ought to just do what I want to do and hope for the best. Another part of me desperately wants to play the game perfectly and avoid any possible misstep, even though so many people who do this still get screwed over (I am at a top 20 university with decent placement, so getting a TT job is not completely off the table, just unlikely). In 4-5 years when I am on the job market, will I have regretted playing this game (or not)?
This a fascinating query, and I am curious to hear readers' answers to all three of the OP's questions:
- Would it hurt (or even destroy) one’s chances on the job market?
- If yes, are such norms justified?
- In 4-5 years when I am on the job market, will [the OP] have regretted playing this game (or not)?
In answering/discussing them, I ask readers to focus on the professional issues involved: that is, on whether sex work (such as an OnlyFans page) would in fact hurt (or "even destroy") the OP's chances on the job-market, what the professional norms are here, and whether those norms are justified. In line with this blog's safe and supportive mission, I am going to require readers to refrain from 'sex-shaming', and I will not approve comments of that sort. For again, the OP is asking for professional advice, not commentary on their preferences, values, etc. Bearing this in mind, allow me to briefly share some thoughts, and then open things up for discussion.
On question (1): I think there are several relevant things worth bearing in mind in making decisions like this. First and foremost, the academic job-market may not be the only job-market worth thinking about here. As we all know, precious few philosophy PhDs ever end up getting permanent, full-time academic jobs. Consequently, there is a very real chance that the OP may need (or elect) to leave academia for a job in outside industry. In that case, one needs to think about how having an OnlyFans might affect not only their chances for an academic job, but also a good non-academic one. Second, when it comes to academic jobs, I think it may be important to bear in mind that many of the primary decisionmakers regarding your career prospects (viz. hiring, tenure, promotion, disciplinary proceedings, etc.) are unlikely to be philosophers but instead administrators (i.e. deans, provosts, university presidents, boards of trustees, etc.). And unfortunately, as all too many stories these days about higher education suggest, some administrators seem less concerned with what is right as a matter of principle than with parents, donors, and public relations (i.e. public perceptions of their college or university). Further, administrators and the interests they may respond to (e.g. donors, etc.) may have very different, and more conservative, moral and political views than philosophers. Consequently, it would not surprise me at all that if having an OnlyFans could very much torpedo ones chances for many jobs, at least if relevant decisionmakers found out about it.
On question (2): This is a question that I do not feel very well-placed to weigh in on, but I'll say this. I take very seriously arguments that discrimination against sex work and sex workers is wrong.
On question (3): knowing what one will regret is a very difficult thing. So, here's a short personal story dear to my heart. I have never been a sex worker, but I have been a semi-professional musician, and I spent a great deal of time in graduate school playing with my band, traveling to play at clubs, and so on. Unfortunately, although playing in a band seemed rational enough to me at the time, it very much did distract me from graduate school for several years, impacting my progress toward my PhD in ways that I think still reverberate today. Now, things turned out "okay" for me in the end: I got a tenure-track job (and later tenure) after an absolutely horrific 8 years on the academic job market. But, at the same time, they could have just as easily not worked out. So, I will say this: there have been many times that I have seriously regretted some of the decisions that I made in graduate school, and I may very well have regretted them 100x more had things not worked out as they have. The person that I was at 25-years-old was a very different person than I am today at 44, and unfortunately, my younger self put his career in jeopardy and otherwise made things far more difficult for his older selves than his later selves think he should have. So, I think this is worth bearing in mind. In making weighty decisions about the future, it is of course important to be aware of what you value now–but it can also be very important to bear in mind what you might want in 5, 10, or 20 years, as (unfortunately) there are no "take backs" in life.
None of this is intended to dissuade the OP from making one decision over the other. I am merely reporting what my own experiences suggest on the above questions, and I will be the first to admit that the older that I've gotten, the more risk-averse that I've become (in large part because of perceived mistakes that I made earlier in my life and career). But anyway, these are just my thoughts and experiences, and admittedly those of just one person. What are your thoughts? (Again, please bear in mind the commenting guidelines noted above and the Cocoon's mission!).
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