the ways in which
As a fellow graduate student pointed out to me,"the ways in which" has a very strong connotation, marking a certain style of thinking and writing about history and society. Most people that come through giving talks to my program, whether for job talks, colloquia, or some other lectures, can pretty easily be divided into"ways in which" types and people who know how to hold an audience's attention.
Reflecting on the problems of jargon that come with writing history that is only meant for other historians, I'm working on a paper:"The Pedagogical Semiotics of Interlinguistic Anglophone Discourse, 2008-1999". On a closely related note, the grad students are think of doing either drinking games or jargon bingo to spice up future talks."Blah blah blah, blah blah actor's category, blah blah.""Bingo!"
On another related note, every would-be historian needs to watch the latest The Simpsons,"That 90s Show", if you haven't already. See a few clips here. Choice quotes:
- Suede-elbow-patched associate professor:"Look at that lighthouse! It's the ultimate expression of phallocentric technocracy violating Mother Sky." Marge:"I thought they were just tall so boats could see them." Professor:"No, Marge, everything penis-shaped is bad."
- Marge:"Did you know that history is written by the winners?" Homer:"Really? I thought history was written by losers!"