cimorene: cartoony drawing of a woman's head in profile giving dubious side-eye (writing)
[personal profile] cimorene
DILEMMA.

Hypothetically, if I ever wanted to publish an original gay romance novel, it wouldn't be wise to set it in the town where I live. Finland isn't very big, and setting anything here - even if it wasn't in town here; there just aren't that many universities and it would certainly be recognisable, maybe even to people who haven't even been there - is as good as giving the characters the names of the real people who inspired them.

So, you know, there are universities everywhere, right? Just set it in Anycollegetown USA at Anonymous University? EXCEPT that my experiences of universities in the US are confined to on the one hand, a small and exclusive liberal arts college, entirely in the language and literature departments (Amherst), and on the other, a not-so-great state university... mostly in the science departments (Alabama, ranked 150-somethingth).

But the only single thing I've spent any length of time studying is sociology, and my experience seems to indicate that the discipline is treated differently in North America. Certainly Alabama doesn't even have a department, and Amherst lumped it in under anthropology (which... well... *insert debate*). For that matter, my idea of how a large North American research university handles higher degrees in the social sciences is... practically non-existent, because I'm 100% certain it's really not like it is here, where the department has only one full professor and like, six lecturers and six doctoral candidates, or something like that, and the entire institute is held in a house (rather, an ex-residence) the size of the house I grew up in (no seriously - no, seriously).

So if I want to set it at Anonymous University, I'd probably have to change the department that my characters work in, and then I wouldn't know enough about the academic side of their subject. I could just recruit a full-time North American informant with experience of some university subject or other, of course. Volunteers to the left. And if I want to set it at a New England liberal arts college, I'd have to change the department, too. I could probably manage something, though. I have a bit of knowledge of the academic side of anthropology and folkloristics, I suppose. It would be fun to write about someone writing their thesis on, like, the black metal scene (someone's doing that in folkloristics at Åbo Akademi, or they were a few years ago).

(no subject)

Date: 9 Jul 2008 10:58 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] crowbars.livejournal.com
I could help you out if you wanted to set it at a large state school's science department. That's pretty much all I know about academia, unfortunately.

(no subject)

Date: 10 Jul 2008 06:55 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cimness.livejournal.com
LOL. Well, at least your experience is more recent than my Dad's since he got his phD in like, 1981.

(no subject)

Date: 9 Jul 2008 11:11 pm (UTC)
ext_14405: (Default)
From: [identity profile] phineasjones.livejournal.com
i know someone writing on a similar topic (not even sure what his is exactly... some kind of metal stuff) for musicology.

he's also going to talk about bandom at a musicology seminar in the fall. :)

(no subject)

Date: 10 Jul 2008 06:54 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cimness.livejournal.com
Folkloristics would probably have a totally different focus. Although I'm not sure what musicology entails, I assume the folkloristics part would be about the culture - the rituals, clothing, signals, maybe even the verbal folklore of the group... their social interaction - although the music would have to be described as well, in the tradition of classical anthropology.

(no subject)

Date: 15 Jul 2008 11:24 pm (UTC)
ext_5724: (Default)
From: [identity profile] nicocoer.livejournal.com
I don't know about soci, but I know that Penn State's Medieval and Ren studies department is in an old residance hall? I think it would be entirely reasonable.

As for how the department is structured, it would depend on the university- if it's a smaller one or if it's an out campus (which is reasonable as Penn State, for example, is moving towards if you want to finish in a particular area, you have to go to X campus or main. . .) then that sort of structure is entirely reasonable, as would it if they are studying under a particular proff, and the MAIN campus isn't too far off (it's not unusual here for a proff to teach half the week on one campus and the other half at another.) So their prefered office might be at the smaller campus, with a more generalized office on the main campus. It would depend on how their advisor behaves as a character. :D

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