In our February "how can we help you?" thread, a reader writes:
I am no longer in academic philosophy and recently transitioned into a new career doing something unrelated. While making that transition I had papers under review. The rejections are starting to come back and I am wondering what to do with them. I’m hesitant to shop them out again as I no longer ‘need’ more publications and feel that I would be getting in the way of those who need CV lines desperately. However, at least one of the papers is very publishable so I don’t want to abandon it entirely. Edited volumes seem out of the question given my new outsider status. Any suggestions other than continued residence on my computer’s hard drive?
Interesting question. I'm not entirely sure what the options here are aside from journals and edited volumes. Personally, I'm not sure that the OP's hesitancy about publishing in a journal is warranted–as it's not clear at all to me that if they did, they would be standing in anyone's way. Journals tend to publish what referees recommend accepting–so, even for journals that have a low acceptance rate, it seems to me exceedingly unlikely that if the OP were to publish their paper in a journal, it would prevent someone else from doing so. I'm also not sure that edited volumes are out of the question, as I've seen more than a few edited volumes containing work by people who have seemingly left academia.
But these are just my thoughts. What are yours?
Leave a Reply to MDCancel reply