Goodreads helps you keep track of books you want to read.
Start by marking “The Elements of Academic Style: Writing for the Humanities” as Want to Read:
The Elements of Academic Style: Writing for the Humanities
by
Eric Hayot teaches graduate students and faculty in literary and cultural studies how to think and write like a professional scholar. From granular concerns, such as sentence structure and grammar, to big-picture issues, such as adhering to genre patterns for successful research and publishing and developing productive and rewarding writing habits, Hayot helps ambitious
...more
Get A Copy
Kindle Edition, 256 pages
Published
August 5th 2014
by Columbia University Press
(first published July 15th 2014)
Friend Reviews
To see what your friends thought of this book,
please sign up.
Reader Q&A
To ask other readers questions about
The Elements of Academic Style,
please sign up.
Be the first to ask a question about The Elements of Academic Style
This book is not yet featured on Listopia.
Add this book to your favorite list »
Community Reviews
Showing 1-30

Start your review of The Elements of Academic Style: Writing for the Humanities

Several friends and colleagues recommended this book to me, so I was surprised by how little I enjoyed it. Part of the problem has to do with the kind of writing Hayot advocates—which is the echt academic genre of cultural theory. Few of his examples of strong prose strike me as compelling. (There's even an odd moment when Frederic Jameson is held up as an avatar of style.)
But his advice about writing is also often troubling. For instance, Hayot takes the valid insight that the interest of ...more
But his advice about writing is also often troubling. For instance, Hayot takes the valid insight that the interest of ...more

I'm teaching this book in my introduction to Graduate Studies book and its emphasis on some of the toughest structural and stylistic challenges of scholarly writing is offset with its lightness of touch, Hayot's wit and frankness. He begins the book with generative writing strategies--reminiscent of Professors as Writers or How to Write a Lot: A Practical Guide to Productive Academic Writing, and his emphasis on habit-building was generous and practical. I also particularly liked his
...more

This book is quite illuminating to a new grad student like me. I love the way Hayot describes some things, such as showing only the tip of your ice burg, or avoid giving your reader all of your background info and research. Using that advice really helped me decide what was important and what wasn't important in my papers for class.
I still struggle with the uneven U, because I can totally tell a 5 from a 1, but the middle numbers sort of jumble together for me, no matter how many times I reread ...more
I still struggle with the uneven U, because I can totally tell a 5 from a 1, but the middle numbers sort of jumble together for me, no matter how many times I reread ...more

I bought this book when I began writing my dissertation, and it was an incredibly important resource for learning how to craft an academic text that was, frankly, very intimidating. There wasn’t a lot of institutional instruction on how to write at the graduate level at my school, so Hayot’s book came in handy when trying to find my way as a writer in the humanities. I especially found the chapter on “the uneven U” to be helpful, as my biggest problem as a younger student was crafting paragraphs
...more

Mar 10, 2017
Lacey
rated it
really liked it
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
kindle-books,
graduate-school
When I started graduate school and began to hand in writing, for the first time in my life, I received a fair amount of criticism, but much of it without any real suggestions for how to improve my writing to suit the work I was now doing. It seemed like academic writing was just something I was expected to know how to do, without anyone telling me--or at least that I would figure it out.
So when I saw this come up on Amazon, I picked it up for my Kindle and planned to read it, hoping that it ...more
So when I saw this come up on Amazon, I picked it up for my Kindle and planned to read it, hoping that it ...more

4.5
This book really resonated with me when I was in my final semester of MA trying to revise a journal article I was working on. It is full of tips and tricks, but there are a few chapters on how exactly to look at a paragraph in the grand scheme of your argument and it was just brilliant. Definitely pick this up for some great writing techniques.
This book really resonated with me when I was in my final semester of MA trying to revise a journal article I was working on. It is full of tips and tricks, but there are a few chapters on how exactly to look at a paragraph in the grand scheme of your argument and it was just brilliant. Definitely pick this up for some great writing techniques.

This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it,
click here.

May 23, 2019
Carol Tilley
rated it
liked it
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
scholarship,
writing
3.5

Hayot means well, but this book left a bad taste in my mouth. There were some helpful comments, like when he says that "the work you do in your first years after starting graduate school... [will] determine, in almost every case, the first decade or so of your life as a publishing scholar" (119). His ideas on writing as process were also very useful. But I found his comments on style, which occupy roughly 2/3 of the book, commonsensical and even trite oftentimes. I think he's a mediocre stylist
...more

As a PhD student, I really appreciate the advices given in this book, especially the one about writing every day. Though I have to say, pursuing my academic career while tending to my new-born child have been quite a difficult situation, and I haven't really followed that advice very well. I almost got the grudge on why Hayot make it sound so easy.
The discussions on different aspects in writing are also helpful, to various degrees. I like the style of this book, and enjoyed it very much.
The discussions on different aspects in writing are also helpful, to various degrees. I like the style of this book, and enjoyed it very much.
There are no discussion topics on this book yet.
Be the first to start one »
Goodreads is hiring!
No trivia or quizzes yet. Add some now »
“Active writing should not involve saying things you already understand and know, but instead let you think new things.”
—
1 likes
“You truly engage readers in the introduction when you convince them that it’s worth their time to keep reading, which means making a variety of credible promises (implicit and explicit) about both the value of the problem you will solve (usually explicit: “We have an inadequate or limited theory of early modern sexuality”), your professional credibility for addressing that problem (both explicit and implicit: you show the reader that you understand and know the field in which the problem takes place), and, ideally, by writing sentences or laying out ideas in ways that are rhetorically, rhythmically, or lexically appealing (always implicit). By having, in other words, some kind of style.”
—
0 likes
More quotes…