oursin: Drawing of hedgehog in a cave, writing in a book with a quill pen (Writing hedgehog)
oursin ([personal profile] oursin) wrote in [community profile] leftoverresearchquarterly2010-04-29 10:00 am

Metaquestion - is research ever left over?

Proviso: I am writing as a historian with a large number of physical and digital files of research materials relating to books and articles already written and published, as well as stuff I took notes on or had copied that wasn't strictly relevant to the project I was working on but looked interesting.

Even the files specifically created for a particular project contain a fair amount of material which didn't get into the finished product.

Nonetheless, I hang on to these files, on the grounds that
a) I may need to go back to the original materials at some point;
b) The stuff I didn't use might come in for another project.

I'm perfectly happy, should someone mention something they're researching, which makes me go 'aha! I found something of relevance in X archives when I was looking for something slightly different', to pass on copies of anything of relevance I might have to them.

But I'm really, really, reluctant to think that the basic materials are ever actually finished with.

Is this terribly idiosyncratic of me, or do other people hang on to research in case it might come in handy at some future date?

Anyway, this is a sort of excuse for why I've never actually posted anything to this community, in spite of the aforesaid files.

esteleth: (Default)

[personal profile] esteleth 2010-04-29 10:28 pm (UTC)(link)
I am currently in the process of mapping out and writing my Ph.D. thesis. My advisor told me to deliberately leave an unanswered question and/or hole in the narrative. I was confused by this and questioned this. His reply: "When you become a PI in your own right, you want somewhere to start." I know this is not exactly what you meant in your question, but I think it goes to the same point: how many times have you, in your research, found a dusty folder of random clippings / faded manuscript / packet of data that nothing really was done with that sets off something in your mind, gives you insight or sets you off in a new direction? This has happened to me multiple times. When you leave stuff behind - data or its conspicuous absence - you are creating a starting point for yourself or someone else later on.
commodorified: a capital m, in fancy type, on a coloured background (Default)

[personal profile] commodorified 2010-05-04 03:25 pm (UTC)(link)
I don't think I ever wrote a paper without including at least one paragraph to the effect of "this is potentially Rilly Rilly Cool and Relevant but a) outside the scope of this endeavour b) the data's incomplete/not available within the time/resources I have c) somebody needs to do a massive investigation on it and nobody ever has."

I suppose I mostly did it to say "hey, I DID think of this, look, I am SMRT!" (I AM that student, alas) but I like the idea of leaving notes to the future, too...