Moving (or rather, staying in place)

May 03 2019

Some news: in September, Ill be starting a new job as Director of Digital Humanities at NYU. Theres a wide variety of exciting work going on across the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, which is where my work will be based; and the university as a whole has an amazing array of programs that might be called Digital Humanities at another university, as well as an exciting new center for Data Science. Ill be helping the humanities better use all the advantages offered in this landscape. Ill also be teaching as a clinical associate professor in the history department.

If youre at NYU or somewhere nearby and want to chat, please do reach out; Ill be around through the end of July. There should be more to say about this going forward.

But just to look back a bit: Ill be leaving Northeastern, which has built up one of the countrys best digital humanities programs over the last seven years. The history department (and our college dean, Uta Poiger) have been extremely supportive of the possibilities of digital history, of alternative publication models, and of DH in graduate education. Its been great to see Cameron Blevins expanding the history departments profile since he arrived two years ago. I dont want anyone to think I or they screwed up the tenure or retention process. Ive found it a great place to work. Especially if you live anywhere near Boston.

But this move has been a while coming: about six months after I started at Northeastern, my wife accepted a job teaching Soviet history at NYU. Many academic couples end up juggling locations for various periods of time, and ours hasnt been the worst; Ive been fortunate through various means (the National Endowment for the Humanities, Columbias SIPA, and Northeasterns parental teaching releasesthanks to each) to only have to be on campus one semester a year since we moved to New York in 2015. And New York to Bostonas academics at parties have too often cheerily reminded meis not the worst commute out there; just 4 hours in a comfortable train car with sporadic wi-fi access, with ten minutes of subway rides on either end. Despite its imperfect reputation, Ive found Amtrak to always be great; I did probably 30 round-trips last semester, and didnt hit a single major delay.

But any commute is hard, especially when you have small children. (Which is, demographically, a set that academic commutes fall most heavily on.) I remember, shortly before starting my job at Northeastern, reading Mark Sample write about how the commute is a grueling, brain-frying, wallet-emptying, time-wasting, body-breaking, soul-draining way to live. Amen. I cant help but think that the widespread acceptance of commutes (and their flipside, residential fellowships) is toxic for local university communities and, in aggregate, for gender and probably socioeconomic diversity in the professoriate. But I also see others happily splitting their time or playing a longer game than I can imagine. So its probably enough simply to say the commute is not for us.