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精神慢餐
武夷山
快餐满足了享用不到食堂的上班族的需求,因而很受欢迎,但快餐的营养单一性也是广受诟病的。
JASIST杂志2013年第1期发表了该刊Blaise Cronin主编写的卷首语Slow Food for Thought(精神慢餐)。他倡导“精神慢餐”,我是坚决支持的。
该文转引了美国普林斯顿大学教授、杰出历史学家Anthony Crafton于2010年3月9日写的文章Britain:The Disgrace ofUniversities(英国:大学的耻辱)中的几句话:
慢学术,像慢餐一样,比快餐更深刻,更丰富,更具营养。但是,慢学术需要更长的时间来制作,而且,为了将它制作好,你得雇佣一些不合时宜的怪人,他们坚持以自己的方式来做事。
我在今年7月的维也纳ISSI会议上,向Cronin先生荣获普赖斯奖表示祝贺(照片见http://blog.sciencenet.cn/blog-1557-712700.html)时,顺便告诉他,我很喜欢“精神慢餐”的提法及该提法背后的思想,他稍显得意地问一旁的Sugimoto博士(我在“访奥花絮”一文中提到她,见http://blog.sciencenet.cn/blog-1557-711310.html)“听见了吗?”,Sugimoto回答说,“听着呐”。
原文不长,粘贴如下:
Editorial
Slow Foodfor Thought
I concluded my introduction to Volume 40 of the Annual
Review of Information Science and Technology with the
following observation: “At the risk of sounding like a fogey,
there is something to be said for deliberative writing and
deferred gratification. . . . Perhaps what academia needs now
is a Slow Writing movement akin to the Slow Food, Slow
Cities movement” (Cronin, 2006, p. ix). As I begin my fifth
year as Editor of the Journal of the American Society for
Information Science and Technology, I am even more persuaded
of the need for both up-and-coming as well as established
scholars to take their foot off the accelerator. I am
bothered by a couple of trends in particular. First, the number
of submissions to this (and other journals with which I have
an association) that are manifest derivatives of prior work,
minor extensions of conference presentations, or—worst of
all—(unrevealed)duplicates of previously published work: It
is all too easy to see why the terms salami slicing and least
publishable unit have become regrettable staples of the discourse
on scholarly publication. Second, it seems to me that
rather too many manuscripts are being written in haste, with
insufficient attention being paid to matters of style, grammar,
and bibliographic exactitude. In the scramble to get into print,
corners are being cut with the result that it can sometimes be
difficult to work out exactly what an author is trying to say or
just how reliable or novel the reported findings are. More
generally,the “publish or perish” culture has led to a well documented
and worrisome increase in the rate of retractions
(e.g.,Grieneisen & Zhang, 2012), not least among the most
prestigious scientific journals.
Do scholars and researchers really need to publish so
much so quickly? Is short-term research focused on “hot” or
emerging topics seen as the key to bumping up one’s citation
count,boosting one’s h-index? Is the competition for external
funding and priority so fierce that shoddiness, shortcuts,
and(occasionally) chicanery should each be accepted as a
cost of doing business in the academic world? In recent
years, the demands of promotion and tenure systems have
increased steadily such that junior scholars are now running
like rats on a treadmill. Evidence? The publication lists
and curricula vitae attached to tenure dossiers continue to
lengthen as expectations rise, and not just in the sciences and
social sciences (Cronin & La Barre, 2004). At some point,
the pace of production must surely affect the quality of
what is produced. I am neither a lone nor, I trust, a particularly
dyspeptic voice on this subject. Here’s what the
distinguished historian Anthony Grafton (2010) said: “Slow
scholarship—likeSlow Food—is deeper and richer and
more nourishing than the fast stuff. But it takes longer to
make, and to do it properly you have to employ eccentric
people who insist on doing things their way” (p. 32). There
are still some engagingly eccentric individuals in our field,
but my sense is that the Taylor-esque demands of our publication
culture so privilege efficiency over efficacy that the
few remaining exemplars of the genus will soon vanish, not
to be replaced. And that would be a great shame.
References
Cronin, B.(2006). Introduction. In B. Cronin (Ed.), Annual Review of
Information Science and Technology (Vol. 40, pp. vi–ix). Medford, NJ:
Information Today.
Cronin,B., & La Barre, K. (2004). Mickey Mouse and Milton: Book
publishing in the humanities. Learned Publishing, 17(2), 85–98.
Grafton,A. (2010, March 9). Britain: The disgrace of the universities [Web
log post].Retrieved from http://www.nybooks.com/blogs/nyrblog/2010/
mar/09/britain-the-disgrace-of-the-universities/
Grieneisen,M.L., & Zhang, M. (2012). A comprehensive survey of
retracted articles from the scholarly literature. PLoS ONE, 7(10),
e44118.doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0044118
Blaise Cronin
Editor-in-Chief
© 2012ASIS&T • Published online in Wiley Online Library
(wileyonlinelibrary.com).DOI: 10.1002/asi.22882
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