The advantages of being independent are
numerous.
You can be
free to do what you want to do, not something that fits a departmental gap.
You have no
department duties that drain your energy.
You have no
department politics that drain your energy.
You are
under no pressure to produce for research assessments, etc., although without
pressure, and with freedom, you can often produce far more than
‘professionals’.
You can
write honest reviews.
There are
many, many others in the same situation as independent scholars, and we provide
mutual support for each other. Establish a network of trusted email friends and share with them. Remember, plagiarism is
all too common, and what you reveal in a conference paper may be taken and used
by those who hear it without acknowledging that it was taken from your paper. As
a general rule, do not reveal anything that is not already accepted for
imminent publication, because as a non-professional, it will be hard to convince
‘the establishment’ that it was your idea first. Even those who read
manuscripts or proposals for publishers can leak your ideas. Publishers,
naturally, do not reveal who their readers are, but one can sometimes guess.
Big expensive conferences are not always wonderful, and
there can be hidden competition in the air, trying to impress and so get
noticed. Do not play that game. Pursue scholarship for its own sake. Your
antennae will lead you to like-minded people.
***
Practical suggestions.
Decide first if biblical scholarship is really what you want
to pursue. Only real commitment will see you through the hard parts.
You will need rigorous self-discipline and have to work out
what best suits you. I have found that starting at my desk at 5am is the best
way to get in a couple of hours before the ‘day’ starts, and what is done in
those quiet hours can keep you happy and calm for the rest of a day when there
might be no more opportunity to go anywhere near a book or a desk.
Do not waste time. Any lost five minutes is five minutes you
will never have again. A train journey or waiting at the dentist’s can be used
for reading. Always carry a note book; ideas can [and do] come in the
supermarket.
Find a good library that has the type of journals/books you
need. Some, but not all, are online, but there are many good pieces in very
old publications. I go the University Library in Cambridge for one Saturday or
so each month – Saturday being usually a free day. That is about 2 hours drive
from my home, and means setting out at about 6.45 am.
Do not use library time for pottering. Go with a clear idea
of what you want [get the location numbers beforehand from the on-line
catalogue] and then photocopy/scan only the pages you need. Always put a full
reference on the copy. You have no
time to chase lost references. Make a collection of these copies and file them
in the way you find most convenient. Since I started this a long time ago, when
photocopying was a new invention, I now have filing cabinets full of bits and
pieces of paper, all classified and easy to access.
Never quote from a book without checking all its claimed sources. You will be
surprised how many books have rogue references, caused by copying without
checking from the work of another person. And check all translations; they can
be very strange indeed.
Enjoy your work. When
it ceases to be a pleasure, it is time to stop.
***
I am grateful to Margaret for her willingness to write this article. Her latest book – The Mother of the Lord, Volume 1: The Lady in the Temple – is out now.
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