Restoration 2009

= Restoration/18th c. British =

LAST UPDATED: 11/21 4:32 pm EST
 * Don't forget to update the time stamp if you make an addition.
 * Use the wiki ethically (no deleting others' comments)

I am currently...
 * ABD (and finishing this year if I get a job): 7
 * In a temporary/VAP/postdoc position: 7
 * In a tenure-track position: 2
 * On a Restoration/C18 search committee: 1
 * Just lurking:

[Discussion moved below.]

Jobs
American U
 * just thought I'd note that this is the 2nd year of this search.

Angelo State U (Long 18th)

Auburn
 * Additional materials requested November 3 (x6)
 * Acknowledgment letter 11/12
 * A: I got additional material request via email, then snail mail confirmation of application & demographic card came over a week later.

Bard College (17th/18th-c not including Romanticism)
 * got email acknowledgement
 * did you send your application very early? I haven't received any acknowlgt email yet
 * correction (to initial post): turns out I did not get an email ack. I thought I had, but upon searching my inbox, I see that I was wrong. Sorry for the confusion.
 * I got an e-mail auto-reply from "Bard Hrdept" when I sent my materials. It went into the spam folder and I had to dig around for it.
 * Oh, yes, I think that's what I was thinking of. And I think I deleted it. So, correction to my above correction is that I got that auto-reply.

College of St. Scholastica (MN) (women's, 18th or 19th)
 * Review begins Oct. 15

Colorado College (ability to teach core poetry classes-18thc and Romanticism)
 * 11/7: Application acknowledged by snail mail.
 * got email acknowledgement (x2)

Connecticut College (Concentration in Race and Ethnicity)
 * got email acknowledgement

Macalester
 * 11/10: Application acknowledged via snail mail, letter dated 10/31 (x4)
 * 11/19: Request for teaching philosophy, evaluations, syllabi, writing sample, and letters of rec (x10)

McMaster U Where is the blacklist link for this year's search? This school should be entered on it. The department has hired 3 new junior faculty members with US degrees within the past 5 years. All 3 hires have gone elsewhere--back to the States for other (and better) tenure track jobs. There are similar scenarios in other departments. The word on the street is that this is a miserable and demoralizing place to work, especially if you are a US citizen or US trained Ph.D.


 * I put a comment up here the other day, as a response to the above. I see someone has deleted it. Do NOT delete other people's comments. If you can't abide by the rules of the wiki, don't use it. Engaging in that sort of thing only inspires others to look up your IP address. Here's my comment, ONCE AGAIN: the blacklist is ongoing, not yearly. The wiki is called "Universitis to Fear." Find it and enter McMaster English if you want to. That said, I myself am a US citizen and US-trained Ph.D. who would be thrilled to teach at McMaster and be involved with ECF.

Mississippi State
 * Application acknowledged via snail mail
 * 11/14 email request for more materials
 * 11/21 email request for more materials (x2)

Northwest Missouri State (18th or 19th)
 * Screening begins Nov. 1
 * Application acknowledged via snail mail

Pacific Lutheran (18th)
 * Application acknowledged via snail mail
 * Additional materials requested 11/12.

Additional materials requested 11/14.

Roanoke College
 * 10/28 Received postcard saying app was rec'd. (x2)

Saint Anselm (18th)
 * got email acknowledgement (2)
 * MLA interview request by email, 11/19 (x4)

Shepherd U (18th)
 * Application acknowledged via email 10/30.
 * MLA interviews to be arranged "in early December"

South Dakota State University (18th) Deadline: Nov. 30

The Citadel (18th) Review begins Nov. 7 Letters requested Oct 27.
 * Letters requested on Nov 3 (x2)
 * Letters requested on Nov 10

University of California-Los Angeles (transatlantic studies before 1900) Deadline: Nov. 3

U of Colorado-Boulder Open rank, from Advanced Asst on up.
 * I imagine (although I do not know) that people may have been individually invited to apply (their initial search failed, 2 years ago). They said they wanted to do interviews in November...anyone have any news about this search?
 * A: My advisor, who is a distinguished professor and good friends/previous colleagues with one of the search committee members, indicated that they're looking for someone at the Assoc/Full Prof rank. I also know that she's provided letters of rec for at least two senior people for this position.
 * Maybe the senior-ish people won't work out, and then they'll dig into the untapped goldmine of more junior apps. Or so I am hoping!

It is indeed very likely that senior-ish people won't work out. As a lurking senior faculty member (from elsewhere), let me say that senior hiring is a mine field while junior hiring is relatively easy. UC has been turned down already, so it's entirely possible they will go junior, as Indiana did last year.
 * hope hope hope hope hope


 * Rejection email (11/20) (x2)

U Maryland--Baltimore County
 * Additional information requested October 28, October 30, November 5, and November 7th (x4)

U of Michigan (1660-1900)
 * Is this job still open? It says "pending approval" on the jil listing and I couldn't find it on the UM HR website today (11/4)
 * A: yes, received a nice acknowledgement of application via email 11/6 with timeline of hiring process.
 * A: more info on timeline: MLA interviews to be arranged "second week of December (December 8-12)" Campus interviews to be conducted  "January and February"
 * A: I got this letter too -- it did say "pending final approval of the search at the College level, we will interview these candidates at the MLA (Modern Language Association) Convention." Hopefully that's just butt-covering language and it will all work out.
 * E-mail acknowledgment rec'd 11/13. Here's hoping!
 * Ditto!
 * Did anyone else not get this email??

U of Ottawa (Rest/18th)
 * Email acknowledgment, query of citizenship 11/21 (x5)

U of Southern California (Early Modern, 1600 - 1800)

Villanova
 * Search canceled? Applicants in some disciplines have been told that the College of A&S is postponing ALL hiring this year.
 * Response to above...I was told by a reliable source that the C18 search has been canceled.
 * The ad is still listed on their website.
 * Still listed? That's good to know. I'm feeling pessimistic, though.
 * Officially canceled; see JIL status update
 * FYI: Villanova is nevertheless mailing out letters with AA surveys attached (received 11/18)
 * Their letter said they were suspending their search and did not expect to make a hire for 2009. Is that the same as canceled?
 * Yes.

Virginia Commonwealth University (British Enlightenment, etc)

Q: I can't find a reference to this job on the JIL or on VCU's web site...can you tell me where to find some info? Thanks!
 * A: it was on the JIL, with a postmark deadline of 11/13. If it isn't there, it probably expired after the deadline (?). It was something like "Early English Colonialism with expertise in texts of the British Enlightenment."
 * A: Ah, that rings a bell. I probably by-passed it because it's not quite my area of focus.  Thanks so much for the clarification...I got nervous there for a second.
 * A: Also, "expertise in the slave-trade debate."

Yale
 * Received 2 postcards stapled together (1 AA survey) as acknowledgement of application (11/7).
 * Received the same 2 postcards (11/12) (ditto 11/17, 11/20)
 * Am I the only one who never got these postcards? A: I got mine, but wouldn't be surprised if others didn't. It was 2 postcards united with one staple, so it could very easily have stuck on another piece of mail and never been heard from again. A: I haven't got one and I mailed my app 10/28. Scratch that, mine showed up this afternoon 11/20.

Discussion
Observation: I will let somebody list the jobs if they feel like it, but I will propose that, having tracked the eighteenth-century possibilities for four years, this is the second-best year. Only the preternatural selection of good positions two years ago (2007) was better. So enter the market with optimism!

A: I don't get it. (Sorry!) YOu're being sarcastic, right? There don't seem to be many openings this year to me!

A: This is my 3rd year on the market in one capacity or another, and I have to agree with the answer above. A good many of the "18th-century" jobs out there this year are being marketed as some version of "the long 19th century."

A: It seems inevitable that after having coopted other centuries for so long, we c18s would experience the same thing. I'm just focusing on the fact that I'm prepared to teach a wide array of materials, from a couple of centuries.

A: The part of the initial observation that I find to be most bizarre is the first clause. There aren't even 20 solidly 18th-century jobs here. Optimism is good, but realism is also acceptable...

A: I'm not sure about how the overall number of jobs compares with previous years. There are always less eighteenth-century jobs than early-modern jobs or Victorian jobs, just as there are less of us applying for them. This is a good year for good jobs. There are seven good research schools hiring (including USC's open-discipline 1600-1800 position and Northwestern's "around 1800" position). There are four really good liberal-arts colleges hiring.

A: Are there really fewer people in our field? It's certainly true at my university, but are there numbers or findings on that? Not that I don't enjoy the fact that we're a spectacular, unique, and very clubbable bunch! This is my 3rd year, too, for what it's worth, and I thought it was a pretty decent year given the economic slump that's caused lots of places, especially state schools, to enact hiring freezes.

A: I think there are definitely fewer of us, at least where I am. All the people in my dept who say "your century is so boring" are now saying "how come there are so many eighteenth century jobs? waah!" I think it's a pretty good year in terms of what's posted, but I'm trying to be realistic and assume that at least a few will get canceled. Good luck to all!

A: But note how restrictive most of these jobs are! USC's search is open discipline; there's not even a guarantee that they'll hire someone in English, let alone in 18th-c. Similarly, Northwestern's is a Romanticist job. And Bard excludes Romanticism and Conn College has a particular focus, etc. And note how many small, religiously-affiliated jobs and/or jobs with 4-4 or 4-3 teaching loads there are. This really isn't a great year for 18thc. Let's hope it gets better next year and that all of those schools with hiring freezes life them! :)

A: I agree that this isn't a great job list this year for 18th-C people. It's not awful, but there are fewer jobs, and fewer really desirable ones, than there were the last two years. And this is the third year in a row that Bard's running their search, which signals to me that there's something screwy at the institution (which, given Bard's reputation, isn't hard to believe).