Dec 26, 2022

Farewell to my so-called academic career

You could never consult Archival Records in a straightforward manner. Much of the interpretation which emerged from that source had to be accepted on the word of the ones who brought it or (hateful!) you had to rely on the mechanical search by the holosystem. This, in turn, required a dependency on those who maintained the system. It gave functionaries more power than Taraza cared to delegate.

 - Frank Herbert, Heretics of Dune

It's now been four years since I quit my PhD, and this September, I returned the pile of infantry regulations I had on loan from the National Defence College library, which I guess marks the ultimate end of my "academic career". I wrote a little bit about this back when it happened, but now that it's been some time, I want to take a broader view of what's happened.


**

The subject of my PhD was the development of Finnish military doctrine as a process of nation-building. Very briefly, in the first two decades of independence, a lot of the things the Finnish military did had a lot more to do with building a very particularly racialized and gendered kind of Finnishness than with national defense. I started understanding this when I did my master's thesis on Finnish armor, and took a preliminary stab at this with a peer-reviewed article I wrote on the jäger way of war.

I worked as a freelancer in defence journalism for a decade or so, so I knew a thing or two about the national defence scene in this country. Our history, and especially our military history, are still captive to a very nationalist, triumphalist Story of the Nation, where heroic Finland overcomes huge odds and difficulties to become the greatest country in the world. The military history of the early years of the republic is invariably written from the viewpoint of the 1939-40 Winter War, which is still framed as a literally miraculous victory over the dastardly Stalin's Asiatic hordes.

So I knew going in that anything that challenges these views is going to have a hard time. That difficulty is compounded by the fact that military history in this country is largely monopolized by the military, in the form of the "cadet school", i.e. the National Defence College. For reasons that aren't entirely clear to me, it's classed as a university, even though the master's degree theses they produce in history would barely make the grade as bachelor's theses in most actual universities. The academic publications the cadet school produces aren't much better; they almost exclusively refer to research produced inside their own institution, with a smattering of random international non-fiction works thrown in.

The military took exception to my research efforts surprisingly early. Way back in 2014, a seminar paper of mine was published in a collection of undergraduate gender studies papers. I wrote about how recent military publications on conscription talk about gender. This led to a faculty member at the defence college looking me up on Twitter, belittling me and berating me for writing "unscientifically". This was absolutely not true, but also a remarkable intervention for an undergrad student to experience. I still don't think I wrote anything particularly incendiary, but I was still sought out by a senior serving officer and abused for it.

That was the most direct military intervention into my academic career, if you will, but certainly not the last one. While I was working on my PhD, I also qualified as a history teacher, specializing in adult education. That led to me teaching some lecture courses at several adult education centers.

One of the first courses I taught was a history of the Jäger movement. Military history is pretty popular around here, and it was packed. The feedback I got was overwhelmingly positive - except for a couple of people, one of whom called me a communist. At least one of them started reporting on my lectures to a military heritage foundation, whose head (a retired general officer) then got in touch with my superiors at the institute.

It was a very silly game of broken telephone, where whoever was reporting on me was exaggerating what I said, and in some instances straight up lying, and the aforementioned retired general then put his own gloss on things. It would almost have been funny, if the foundation hadn't directly demanded that I no longer be allowed to teach. I'm happy to say they were not successful.

Like I said, I've worked in defence journalism in this country, and I know what these people are like. It was very unpleasant to have to defend myself against malicious lies, but on the other hand, I couldn't help feeling that these extremely hostile reactions meant that I was doing something worthwhile. I was also quite cheered by the fact that so many ordinary, non-academic people responded so positively to my teaching. What I didn't expect was that I would also encounter this sanctimonious military patriotism in civilian academia.

**

During the editing process of one of my publications, I was directly told that I shouldn't criticize deficiencies in published research by military officers, because it would be very bad for my career. I was also heavily pressured to remove references to published university-level research that was uncomfortable for the army. I had made what I thought were fairly uncontroversial references to research published in the previous century, and I was treated like I was trying to sneak Erich von Däniken into my footnotes.

Eventually I complained about this, and this person - a fairly influential academic in my field - exploded at me. They angrily denied saying any of the things that they said in the emails they sent me, and were very insulted that I had the nerve to make these kinds of accusations when they were only trying to help me. The editing process was eventually completed, but there were times during it when I thought I was losing my mind. I had physical stress symptoms like I'd never experienced before.

I feel it's fair to say that by this point, I was feeling fairly heavy pressure to conform to the military-patriotic line in my research. The trouble was that I had almost no resources to fight back with. Quite frankly, no-one at my university cared about anything I did. These things were happening in some of my first ever teaching experiences, and my first encounters with academic publishing, and I didn't really have anyone who could help me with them. Apart from some advice from my academic friends, I had to figure everything out myself, and it really multiplied the stress.

Like I think most PhD students in Finland, officially I had two supervisors. I never even met one of them. I've also heard people tall about a "university community" or a community of researchers. If there is such a thing, I certainly never encountered it. I haf great trouble figuring out even the most elementary parts of things like funding applications, because there were times when I couldn't get any answers to my questions.

During my time as a postgraduate at the University of Helsinki, I did not once feel that anyone there even remotely cared about anything I did, or indeed whether I was even doing anything or not.

**

An article in the Finnish journal of adult education divided PhD researchers into four groups. Studying PhD researchers' accounts of their academic careers, they saw these defined by personal and systemic conditions. Personal conditions were things like age and gender, but also research subject, skills and abilities, and so on. Systemic conditions include funding, supervision and "networking".

Those researchers for whom personal and systemic conditions apply are labelled "golden boys and girls", and are highly likely to succeed. I strongly appreciate the authors' remark that when the "golden boys" talked about their careers, there was often at least one, if not several, key points where an academia gatekeeper had given them an opportunity, and they were very reluctant to talk about how it happened. Gatekeeping in academia is very real and very significant, but people who pass the gates don't want to admit it, and those of us who are shut out are dismissed as embittered.

The article identifies three other groups. Those who get systemic support but experience adverse personal conditions are labelled the imposter syndrome sufferers, and those whose personal and systemic conditions are adverse are called the downbeaten. Excluded from support and funding, with severe doubts as to their abilities and a very reasonable skepticism of their chances of success, the downbeaten tend to quit.

I strongly identified with the fourth group: the phantom researchers. In terms of personal conditions, I was fine: as a white cis dude, I'm undoubtedly privileged, and I was quite confident in my abilities. I also think my skills were not entirely lacking. However, I had next to no systemic support. I couldn't secure funding and doors were very determinedly shut in my face. I saw people who had started after me getting opportunities I never had. There were events directly connected to my specialization, where researchers younger than me were invited to participate, and I heard about them afterwards. Apart from the personal support of some of my peers, for which I remain grateful, I was basically left to figure everything out for myself. It's impossible to "network" when you don't have any opportunities to do it. Even though I managed to produce several peer-reviewed articles in this situation, nothing changed. The gatekeepers kept the gates shut.

According to the article, this kind of thing leads to a feeling of being taken advantage of, and eventually bitterness. I'll say.

This is especially compounded by the fact that, as I've said before, the whole gatekeeping process is totally opaque. I certainly never even got the slightest hint as to why none of my funding or work applications were succesful, and I have no idea why the ones that succeeded did so. Rather unsurprisingly, I've found that people who succeed in this system think it works, and those of us who don't have the opposite view.


I raised this question of the opacity of funding for early-career researchers on social media once. I was directly told by a somewhat famous academic to shut up and stop being so bitter that I didn't get funded.

**

So, to recap. I tried to do a PhD on military history. The Finnish army and some of its associated organizations were openly hostile. No-one at my university cared about anything I did, and I was shut out of any opportunities to demonstrate my abilities.

What I expected from academia was a place where I could do work that was meaningful, and where my career prospects would largely depend on the quality of that work. What I found was a system where, unless you know the right people and they're willing to open the right doors for you, it simply doesn't matter what you do, because no-one gives a shit.

I'm sure that many of the people doing research and teaching at universities in this country are as good or better at it than I would have been. What I know for a fact is that that has never actually been determined in any way.

So yeah, you're damn right I'm bitter. It's a terrible system. My time as a PhD student at the University of Helsinki was some of the worst of my entire life. I would rather go back to prison than start a PhD again.

I am deeply grateful that I've since had opportunities to work for employers, both public and private, who actually care about the quality of my work. Right now, I have the great privilege of being employed on a project that's genuinely exciting and delightfully distant from the absolute bullshit that was academia. Whatever happens with that, wherever I end up, at least I know that one chapter in my life is closed for good.

Dec 5, 2022

Let's Read Tolkien 93: The King and the Steward 31-35

Gondor, Minas Tirith
May 17, 3019
“Her Royal Majesty the Queen of Gondor and Arnor!”

We now go to Minas Tirith, where we get to know Aragorn and Arwen a little bit.


**

Aragorn, we learn, is unhappy: despite winning the throne of Gondor, Arwen refuses to actually marry him. They're only pretending to be king and queen, when in reality she's his elven "advisor". It turns out they're also running rival espionage operations, competing for the technical knowledge of Mordor and Isengard by running rival Operation Paperclips. After some repartee with Arwen, Aragorn receives the White Company, Faramir's former guards.

The scene then shifts to a quarry in the White Mountains where Kumai, a Troll engineer, is held captive along with a black Haradrim mûmak, sorry, múmak driver, Mbanga. We're given an infodump about how the Harad Empire fought against slavers from Khand. It's puerile, at best orientalist and cliched, and boring. The significance is that Mbanga gets into a fight with the guards and is killed. There's some very cringey orientalism about how he now gets to go to the heavenly lion hunt or something, and also a frankly uninteresting flashback to Kumai's war experiences. The guards also beat Kumai badly, but this provides an opportunity for him to be smuggled out of the quarry by the anti-Gondor resistance.

However, unbeknownst to Kumai but beknownst to us, it isn't actually the anti-Gondor resistance at all, but a fake resistance movement run by Aragorn's agents. Apparently they all have animal codenames, because Cheetah debriefs Mongoose and sends him to Umbar to capture Tangorn. And with that, chapter 35 and part II come to an end.

**

So, that was part II. I have to say, as a fantasy or adventure novel, this is really not very good. If it was an original IP, so to speak, I would not be reading it any more. So this is kind of a slightly weird exercise where I'm actually interested in Yeskov's alternative Middle-earth, but I'm finding it a chore to trudge through his prose. These chapters highlight the problem: I love the idea of elven and dúnedain spies racing to secure the legacy of Mordor; I dislike the silly stuff about Harad and Khand and so on; and I'm bored by everything else. The combination of the terrible narrative voice and the total incoherence of the fictional world is just really offputting. Also I actually miss Haladdin.

Looking at the table of contents, there's four parts and 69 chapters (nice), so I'm pretty much halfway through. I'm going to keep at this, mostly to see if he comes up with any other cool stuff. But I think I'll be sticking with this sparser narration, largely because I can't really be bothered to engage with the story more closely.

**

Next year: part III

Nov 14, 2022

Warhammer 40,000: Watch Company Andromache

And, while I mind me, there were even then, and always, men named Monstruwacans, whose duty it was to take heed of the great Forces, and to watch the Monsters and the Beasts that beset the great Pyramid, and measure and record, and have so full a knowledge of these same that, did one but sway an head in the darkness, the same matter was set down with particularness in the Records.

 - William Hope Hodgson, The Night Land

Earlier, I made some Deathwatch marines. The project stalled at the time because Brexit had just happened, and GW's shipping was a complete disaster well into the spring. The first bunch of models here I couldn't finish because none of the Deathwatch upgrade kits I'd ordered showed up. However, I got lucky: I got one of these.


The Start Collecting Deathwatch box was an incredible bargain and I was kicking myself for not getting one before they were discontinued. At 2021 retail prices, the box has two Deathwatch Kill Teams at 32,50€ each and a 11€ Deathwatch upgrade sprue. So that's 76€ of stuff I was going to get anyway, plus the 22.50€ Watch Captain and a 45€ Venerable Dreadnought. Amazing value for money, especially since the Kill Team kit is absolutely first-class.

**

The first model I finished was Venerable Dreadnought Lysistrata Tacita of the Prophets of Mercury.


The entire chapter was lost in the Abyssal Crusade in M37 - except for those members seconded to the Deathwatch at the time. One of them was Lysistrata, who still serves the Deathwatch as a Venerable Dreadnought, and is almost certainly the last survivor of the chapter.


**

On to the actual marines: I'm a little bit proud of this Rainbow Warrior with a storm bolter and storm shield.


I since heard that storm bolters don't get special ammo any more in 9th edition, but who cares, maybe I'll try these guys out in 12th or whatever. I imagine frag cannons will still be good though.


The Marine carrying one is from the Black Guard. The next order to arrive was a box of Vanguard Veterans, where I got a thunder hammer for my Blackshield.


I also made a Vanguard Veteran from the Lamenters:


And with that, Malleus Kill Team Gydrael is done!


**

Then, finally, I got my jump packs, which meant I could finish my Chaplain.


As well as converting the special character in the Start Collecting box into the far more interesting Watch Captain Andromache, originally of the Dark Brotherhood and with a Statuesque head and a bolter from the Deathwatch box.



**

I built my marines to an 8th-edition roster, so I have no idea if my equipment choices or indeed anything makes any sense in the current edition, nor do I really care.


My close combat Kill Team will be led by this Sergeant. He's from the Emperor's Shadows; I'm kinda happy with how the chapter symbol worked out.


Because I had Dark Angels bits, here's a veteran from the Angels of Redemption.


And another from my Punishers. I used the skull pad that came with the Deathwatch box, and put a hazard stripe on the storm shield because why not.


This guy is from the Executioners, and I'm absolutely delighted with that chapter symbol! One of my more successful freehands.


Finally, I made an appropriately dramatic Blackshield.


If we add the Jade Paladins Terminator I painted earlier, we have another squad - I think this may need a fifth veteran, but I'll look into that later.



**

I also made a whole bunch of guys with storm bolters, because I like storm bolters. The squad will be led by Watch Sergeant Dargaard Soth from the Death Knights.


Here's a Grail Knight: they're a homebrew Blood Angels successor chapter I invented, and I built the model out of Blood Angels tactical squad bits and a Deathwatch shoulder pad.


From the slightly disappointing video game Inquisitor: Martyr, a Stormwatcher.


Finally, there's this Black Dragons Vanguard Veteran.


When we add the Imperial Fist and the Smurf from the Overkill box and the Dark Angel Terminator I built earlier, here's a Furor Kill Team.


**

The rest of the veterans will join the two jump pack dudes from the Overkill box to make a Vanguard Veterans squad. Here's an Exorcist:


And a veteran from the Mentor Legion:


And finally the sergeant, from the Crimson Guard, with an inferno pistol from a Blood Angels box and a Statuesque Miniatures head.


Here's the whole gang:



**

I think that's all of my Deathwatch marines on foot dealt with. However, I did buy the new Horus Heresy box this summer, and when we split the contents with some friends, I ended up with all ten of the Cataphractii Terminators. So why not make a Deathwatch relic terminator squad?

Since I've already got all these thunder hammers and whatnot, I decided to go with the classic Cataphractii loadout of combi-bolters and lightning claws, but give the sergeant a chainfist. I also decorated them with purity seals and various other doodads from my box of space marine bits.

Because the armor is so old, I wanted the suits to be worn by Second Founding or otherwise well-endowed chapters. So here's my Sergeant, from the Inceptors.


Blood Drinker, because the Blood Angels were being really subtle about the whole vampire thing. I had a little Blood Angel shield thingy left over, and also that blood-drop-themed thing, so I put them on this dude.



Storm Lord. I gave him one of those spiky things from the Chaos Terminator Lord kit, as it had a Tyranid head on it and I thought this would be something a White Scars successor chapter would do.




And finally, a Minotaur. Who knows who they stole that suit from. Possibly the Inceptors! I made the bronze color by mixing two parts Copper and one part Natural Steel.


I wasn't that enthusiastic about these models at first, I have to admit, but they were fun and easy to build.



**

Of all the modeling projects I've done so far, I may have enjoyed this one the most. The classic marine kits are some of the best ones anyone's ever made, and the Deathwatch veteran kit is one of the best of them.

On top of that, a Deathwatch army really lets you make every single model unique: they can pretty much all have different equipment and be from different chapters, which makes for a really fun modeling, painting and even research exercise, where you can create individuals but tie them all together into an army. I've had fun just browsing Lexicanum looking for entertaining chapter colors and logos, let alone executing them and thinking about how to make each Marine a little bit different.

Now that I have a bunch of infantry, the next thing to do is to get them some support. I'm quite looking forward to building more Deathwatch!

Nov 7, 2022

Let's Read Tolkien 92: The King and the Steward 25-30

Ithilien, Blackbird Hamlet 
May 14, 3019 
“So you just announced it to the entire Emyn Arnen: ‘merry men of the Blackbird Hamlet?’”

Together with the men of Blackbird Hamlet, our heroes are planning to rescue Faramir.


**

Faramir and Éowyn are being held in Emyn Arnen, and they're plotting to escape with the help of Beregond. The Blackbird Hamlet gang are plotting to free them, and now Tangorn and Tzerlag participate. Various spying shenanigans ensue, leading up to Tzerlag sneaking into Emyn Arnen to free Faramir. The attempt fails, and it looks like they're going to be killed, but Aragorn's spies let them escape.

Two constants remain. The names are all over the place: the man Beregond clandestinely meets is called Runcorn, and they're caught by the Gondorian "counterspy" called, ludicrously, Cheetah. Anachronisms abound: the espionage and counter-espionage are fully 20th-century, as is the martial art Tzerlag is trained in. Someone actually shouts "Freeze! Drop your weapons!". And so on. Yeskov's Middle-earth is a total mess. The only redeeming feature here is that it's Blackbird Hamlet.

What's worse is how Yeskov ruins his story by turning everything into a sterile intellectual exercise. Whether it's intelligence and counterintelligence, or a fight in a hallway, one side always know exactly what the others expect them to do, and then do something different. Everything works out just so, and this is explained to us by nearly omniscient characters as if everything was always completely obvious. Faramir and Éowyn are the only ones who are allowed to escape this, and therefore the only characters in these chapters who even remotely resemble people. With everyone else, there's no human element present at all.

Again, the overriding impression is that Yeskov very badly wants us to think he's incredibly clever. This could have been a decent spy/heist story, but it's just soulless. By the way, our Nazgúl main character Haladdin is barely even mentioned in these chapters.

Where this all ends up, then, is that Faramir and Éowyn are free, Haladdin and Tzerlag have access to Faramir's palantír, and Tangorn sets off for Umbar.

**

In other news, I'm happy to say that I finally got to give my lecture on Tolkien at the Helsinki Adult Education Center, as part of our lecture course on the history of heresy. I talked about evil, Manicheanism and Pelagianism, and did my exegesis of Frodo's experience on Amon Hen. I thought it went all right, and I'm very pleased I got to put together some of the stuff I've been writing about here into a proper lecture.

**

Next time: Aragorn.

Oct 10, 2022

Epic: Let's Paint Aeronautica Imperialis

Let's face facts: I love painting little planes. What got me back into this whole hobby in the first place was Star Wars: Rebellion, and I liked painting all the little TIE Fighters and Y-wings and so on so much that I bought Star Wars: Armada and all of its squadron expansions just to paint more of them. And Warlord's Blood Red Skies. So yeah I think I like planes.

Also, 6mm Epic was my first love, and I thoroughly enjoyed painting and playing Adeptus Titanicus. However, I've finished painting all my Titanicus stuff for the moment. Is it, therefore, high time to get my hands on Aeronautica Imperialis, if only for the sheer pleasure of painting all the little planes? Especially since they just announced a beautiful golden flyer, and I love gold? Yes. Yes it is.

**

My friendly local game store still had all three starter sets in stock, and I dithered for a while over which one to buy. Eventually my Gladius experience tipped me over into Wings of Vengeance: the Imperial Navy flyers are represented in Gladius, and my brother likes playing orks in our multiplayer games, where he makes devastatingly effective use of Dakkajets.


I'm going to start with the Thunderbolts. Somehow, I did not learn my lesson about fiddling with tiny-as-hell magnets when I built my Epic Knights, so I'll be magnetizing their underwing hardpoints. I've still got a whole pile of those Primal Horizon 1/16"×1/32" magnets, and at least I can console myself with the thought that if I use them on these models, I won't have to use them on anything else. The Thunderbolt's wing is just barely thick enough to take the magnets:


I decided to start with the Skystrike AAMs, and what I ended up doing was simply chopping off part of the pylon to accomodate the magnet. It's not pretty, but it works, and they're under the wing anyway, it'll be fine.


This wasn't as fiddly as I'd feared, but I'm still not doing any of the other munitions unless I need them! So far, this is the most glaring difference between Aeronautica Imperialis and Adeptus Titanicus: with the latter, they've thought about magnetizing in the design of the miniatures, but with Aeronautica, it doesn't even seem to have crossed anyone's mind.


Other than that, the models were a delight to assemble. The quality is similar to Titanicus, which is to say very good, and since there weren't many choices to make here, it was just an easy and satisfying build.


One thing did bother me, though: the bases. Even in that preview of the Custodes flyer I linked earlier, GW always shows the bases completely unpainted. I think that's a tremendous shame, they're big and chonky and practically crying out for paint. There is simply no way I'm not painting that Custodes base gold. Luckily, there's a lovely guide on Goonhammer that shows how to pop the bases open so they can be painted and still stay functional. I tried it and it works.


The planes themselves are going to be painted dark green to match my Imperial Guard vehicles, and if I'm going to do that, I think it would be fun to give them a similar camouflage scheme as I did for my Soviet Blood Red Skies planes. So it's Deep Sky Blue for the undersides.


The blue isn't actually that brilliant, but the light was hitting my desk funny and I like it. I was teaching Swedish history at the time and decided to use the Kalmar union colors for the insignia. Here are the bases:


They were quite easy to reassemble, so I'm definitely going to be painting the rest of the bases as well. For the top side of the Thunderbolts, I painted them Luftwaffe Camo Green with some German Camo Dark Green and Black Green splotches to make a sort of camouflage pattern.


I also went full Soviet on the markings, with the exception that the numbers are significant: these are Blackbird 1 and 2 from whatever I'm going to call my Imperial Navy unit.

**

Then it's on to the Dakkajets! Like I said, I've become quite fond of them during our games of Gladius, and I wanted to try my hand at an epic-scale conversion. I was originally going to do this with a 28mm Dakkajet, but I never managed to pick up one of those three-jet boxes until they went out of production. Anyway I chopped a bit off the top and bottom of the fuselage.


And swapped them. With a little putty and some internal support, it worked out just fine.

I assembled the other two in a more traditional way.


And magnetized the hardpoints, if not any of the ordnance (yet). Then it's on to painting, and since my brother's preferred color in Gladius is orange, that's what we're going with.


The Dakkajets have the name of their mothership blazoned across the bottom of the fuselage, and carry a kunning recognition stripe on the wings in white and Royal Purple. I used the same colors, along with some Copper, on the bases.


Then it was just a matter of finishing up the top fuselage and tail section on each Dakkajet, and they're done.


I'm happy to report my conversion was also quite successful.


**

My actual first purchase, when I'd decided to do this, was some Arvus Lighters from Forge World, but they took their time showing up. Most of the players in my Rogue Trader campaign have spent so much time flying around in their Arvuses that their characters must know them inside and out. I already painted a Land Speeder in House Frunze colors earlier, so I think these lighters will get the same Royal Purple treatment. I got started with the bases.


The actual models were a breeze to assemble. Forge World resin has come a long way since the old days.


The only complaint I have is that one of them is very wobbly on its flying stand. Here they are:



**

I'm not really all that interested in the Fighta-Bommas, so I think I'll leave them in the box for now. Marauder bombers, on the other hand, show up in Gladius and based on my Thunderbolt experience, I think I'd enjoy building them. Even though they have eight hardpoints each.


Eight! Was this really necessary? They're big planes, by the way.


I could paint both Marauders in my Imperial dark green. However, I mentioned that I really liked painting Star Wars fighters. Even though I'm an Empire guy myself, the dirty white rebel scheme was my favorite. I've been meaning to recreate it in Warhammer forever, and now is the time. Therefore, using the Gue'vesa rules in the Aeronautica Companion, here is the first representative of the Shi'ar sept: the Tau bomber What is foolish speech?


I decided to use Light Green as the marking color, and I think it works.


The faction markings proclaim the Shi'ar sept's loyalty to the Group of Seventeen, and the aircraft number is is the green circle. Sadly, the Tau numerals GW has come up with are pretty much identical to ours. Here's the Imperial Navy Marauder:


I did the camouflage colors a little differently, because I figured most opponents will be seeing the bomber from below.


**

So here we are: I really liked painting these lovely little planes, and I may or may not have already bought more...