Introduction: Beyond reason and vanity1 1Why write for academic journals?5 Reasons for writing7 Internal and external drivers8 Can it be learned?16 Reasons for not writing24 ‘I haven’t done any research’26 2Targeting a journal39 Getting to know the journals42 Instructions for authors48 Journal resources for authors48 Analysing a journal49 Analysing abstracts59 3Finding time to write73 Incremental writing77 A writing plan79 Goal setting83 Monitoring progress87 Becoming a regular writer90 4Finding a topic and developing an argument95 Finding a topic97 Conference presentations98 Thesis101 Freewriting101 Generative writing108 Writing to prompts109 The writing ‘sandwich’112 Finding an argument119 Formulating a hypothesis120 Constructing an argument121 5Outlining125 Level 3 outlining132 Allocating word lengths136 Writing a 275- word abstract – Brown’s 8 questions136 Writing a 375- word abstract – Murray’s 10 prompts142 Calibrating your outline143 6Drafting147 What constitutes good writing in journals?149 Shaping sections157 Streamlining158 Turning headings into prompts159 Internal critique167 7Revising the draft169 Foregrounding generic aspects of academic style172 Revising the outline175 Revising drafts176 Revision processes180 8Dialogue and feedback187 A writers’ group189 Writing retreat195 Dialogue202 More freewriting and generative writing203 9Responding to reviewers’ feedback207 Examples of reviewers’ comments211 Destructive feedback215 Contradictory comments218 Rejection219 Responding to feedback from editors and reviewers223 Acceptance223 10After publication229 Marketing your writing230 Social media232 What now?234 What next?235 Conclusion: Beyond ritual and rivalry241
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