Mary Beard has recently dedicated her column ‘A Don’s Life’ to a day in email, and I thought I’d do the same. After yesterday’s message ‘Evernote, Email, Organisation’ it seemed fitting. I was pretty shocked at the number that arrived in the strike day – when very few British academics sent messages. Given I usually process emails several times a day I’d not kept a tally of how many actually arrived in a single day. I should say right away that all the mailing lists I am on go to another email account. I try to avoid using my Durham email address when asked for my email by companies etc. and when I do end up on lists I tend to unsubscribe if at all possible.
So, these are the messages that arrived in one twenty-four hour period.
Durham
- A message from the person I asked about an administrative issue saying that they don’t know the answer but they will ask a person who might. And then a follow-up from the second person that says that they don’t know and explaining why no-one will know. At least not now, but possibly in January, and maybe not then because it is dependent on something else which might not be known for some time. In sum, I now know that we don’t know; which at least is better than not knowing myself nor knowing who it was that might know. Nobody knows. And we don’t know when we will know. Kafka and Donald Rumsfeld take note.
- a message about the dates of the May examination period and the need to keep them clear of other commitments (especially travel)
- yet another reminder for a seminar in the department. How many do we need for a single seminar?
- a message about a research workshop in the department I’d like to go to but can’t. But I already knew about it, and knew I couldn’t go.
- A meeting of the University’s Middle East & West Africa and Central & South Asia regional interest group. That’s quite a region. I’ve never shown any interest in this group: I think this must be because I’ve written on theMiddle East.
- another reminder about an Ecology seminar. Why do I get these messages?
- a message asking for feedback about the MA in Medieval and Renaissance Studies
- Three messages from colleagues who don’t seem to realise that ‘reply all’ goes to a lot of people who don’t need to know their response to a general question.
- a student message about a missing file in the Durham Online page for a module; now fixed
- a message about potential AHRC studentships in the department
- a message about general PhD funding issues, timescales and procedures; and a follow-up to that asking us to list potential topics
- another message about ESRC doctoral training
- an idiot’s guide to updating web list of publications (I didn’t need this)
- two messages from colleagues about the marking for one of the modules I convene
- a query about my annual review; and then a follow-up to that with the review itself; then a follow-up to that.
- The Vice Chancellor’s fortnightly bulletin of University news
- Two messages giving information on two research fellowship schemes at Durham (here and here)
- two indiscriminate uses of general email lists
- a message to disregard a message doing the rounds that contains a virus
Society and Space
- two new submissions to Society and Space. One is wildly inappropriate, from someone who appears never to have opened the journal.
- A message from an author saying that while we rejected their paper, they are grateful for the reports and the prompt turnaround.
- A message from an author whose paper was not sent to review acknowledging this.
- News that someone else is following the Society and Space blog
- Four emails from co-editors about a possible Society and Space lecture
- Eleven messages about problems with the new manuscript submission software we are trialling.
- Four messages from co-editors about the editorial I drafted for issue 1 next year
- Two messages with reports back on papers for editorial decision, though one of my colleagues is coordinating editor for these, so just for info
- an author asking for confirmation their paper was going to be reviewed, and a follow-up from the journal managing editor; leading to four messages about it being over length. Yes, inclusive means it includes everything.
- an author apologising for a late resubmission of a paper; and then that paper late in the evening
- ten messages from co-editors on new papers
- two messages from the review editors on suggested reviewers
- four other messages I was copied into for information
Other Work related
- a message from a graduate student elsewhere about his work
- three emails checking, confirming and then sending the e-ticket for my trip to Kentucky in March
- confirmation of details of a conference at Yale in April
- a response to a review I’ve just done for a journal asking for other reviewer suggestions
- two messages from Australian friends on the dire situation at the University of Sydney
- Rob Sullivan sending me the text of his ‘Ode to Geography’
- A personalised message from the publisher saying that Jenny Edkins’s new book Missing: Persons and Politics is now out. Jenny is one of the most interesting people working in IR and this should be really good.
- a message from the Open University advertising the next Doreen Massey lecture in March
- a message about the 2012 Heidegger Circle conference
- a message about an interesting French book on Foucault, from Colin Gordon. I posted about this yesterday.
- then a followup from Colin about The Foucault Effect II project
- a message about a potential book chapter for a collection on the Occupy movement
- a message from the Open Political Science journal inviting submissions. Another venture from Bentham Open publishing. This is a scam, basically. The journals are ‘free’ to read (if anyone actually tries, I suppose), but they charge authors top whack to publish. I’ve declined countless invitations to be editor or a board member or contributor for such journals. I try to unsubscribe from these messages but they keep coming.
- a Google Scholar citation alert
Personal
- A message from Amazon about an order
- Two emails about the house we are buying and insurance policy changes
- A message from one of my sisters about Christmas plans
- A ‘Linked In’ invitation. I don’t want these and keep trying to unsubscribe and block them. This invite is for a taxi service I booked online a year ago in Seattle!
- four comments/trackbacks on blog posts for approval
That’s 51 topics, with multiple emails for several of them. Over 100 in total – and that doesn’t include obvious spam, mailing lists or advertising crap which goes elsewhere. Many were deleted, some were filed, and a few replied to or otherwise dealt with. A couple were marked as unread and put into an ‘Action’ folder to be dealt with later. There is nothing left in the inbox itself, which is clear to receive the next twenty-four hours worth of stuff.
It was a somewhat unusual day – only one message from a student. Deadlines were last week so that makes sense. It was a fairly average day on the journal, though one of the issues is consuming a lot of time. It is sorely tempting to send a whole host of these people the email charter. Did writing this post take some time? Yes, of course, but the audit of just how much stuff I receive and deal with in a single day was pretty revealing for me. I regularly get to the end of a day like this and think that I have achieved nothing.
Discover more from Progressive Geographies
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

‘Other Work Related’ #1 reminded me of an email I received yesterday that had me scratching my head. The girlfriend of a geography undergrad at a regional university in Tennessee contacted me to solicit info about job opportunities for people majoring in geography. Apparently he did badly in a course and was questioning everything. Why his girlfriend was taking the lead in this endeavor was unexplained, as was the decision to email a London-based political geographer about the employment opportunities of a cultural geographer in rural Tennessee.
That is an odd one. On this day I didn’t get many of the really strange ones that often come my way that are completely indiscriminate such as the ‘Esteemed Professor! Please supervise my thesis on soil erosion in Bangladesh”.
Pingback: Some excellent advice on writing good emails – and the wonder of SaneBox | Progressive Geographies