Yet More Evidence that FARMS is not "Scholarly"
Posted: Fri Sep 16, 2011 11:55 pm
I had a few free moments today in between my classes here at Cassius, and I decided to utilize this time to do a bit of investigation. In lieu of the upcoming release of the new Mormon Smear Review, I thought it would be interesting to backpedal yet again to examine a very important old question: is FARMS an "academic" or "scholarly" enterprise? Obviously, to any sensible person, the answer is, "No."
But let me sketch out my point in a bit more detail. Every undergraduate who learns how to do research is eventually tasked with the problem of determining whether or not a given text is "scholarly." E.g., is Time magazine "scholarly"? What about Nature? How about the New Yorker? For the uninitiated, this can be difficult to ascertain. Beginning writers are often advised to look at certain features of the text, and to ask certain questions: Was it written by a professor, or someone with a Ph.D. (i.e., an expert)? Does it have the citation features of scholarly writing (a bibliography, and either parentheticals or footnotes)? Was it published by a university press, or by an organization associated with a university? Were the articles therein peer reviewed?
Obviously, most of these are both essential to the process of good scholarship, and convenient ways of dressing up twaddle to look like legitimate academic writing. If you can "fake" the above elements, you stand a good chance of being able to dupe a good chunk of the populace into thinking your "scholarship" is legitimate. This clearly presents a problem with respect to the FARMS Review, since it contains all of the surface features of scholarly writing, and it (allegedly) uses a legitimate peer review process.
In the past, I have suggested that the Review has a "modified" peer review process that differs in substantive ways from the sort of legitimate process that takes place at respectable and genuinely academic publications. I have said that, if the articles in the FARMS Review were 100% scholarly, then there would be no need to fear that they'd face rejection in the market place of ideas. Sadly, this is precisely what has happened.
I mentioned out the outset of this post that I had a few free moments today, and so I took advantage of this to peruse a few of the academic search engines that allow one to access full-text articles, abstracts, and so on in literally hundreds--perhaps thousands--of online scholarly databases. So I went ahead and began searching for the FARMS Review in these databases, and I perused the results. Ladies and gentlemen, I must tell you that I did not find a single entry for the Reveiwamong any of the entries! Not in ProQuest; not in JSTOR; not in ATLA Religious Index. What is going on here? Am I simply looking in the wrong place?
The reality seems to be that the Great and Spacious building known as "The Academy" does not view the work in the Review as legitimate scholarship. I really cannot how significant it is that the Review absent from these databases. Librarians world wide make a very concerted effort to make sure that *all* scholarly journals get archived in these online indexes. Let me say that again, in all caps: LIBRARIANS WORLD-WIDE WANT TO ARCHIVE *ALL* SCHOLARLY JOURNALS IN THESE INDEXES. Thus, the absence of the Review from these lists is a huge countering smack-down against the claim that the Review is anything more than a smear fest.
I can already sense that some Droopy type is going to exclaim, "Well, the academy is biased against religion in general, and against Mormonism in particular!" To which I say: it ain't so. A simple search for "farms review" on ProQuest Religion pulls up hits for Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought, along with entries for the Journal of the Evangelical Theology Society and the Trinity Journal (this last was an article written by our old pals, Carl Mosser and Paul Owen).
In any case, this is remarkable, I hope it will at last demonstrate to critics and TBMs alike that the Review has no stature whatsoever in the larger academic, library indexing, and research communities. While the *actual* scholarly work of people like John Sorenson, Louis Midgley, and John Gee might have traction in the real work, it must be pointed out yet again that the stuff in the Review simply isn't real scholarship. Even if the FARMS editor gets positive feedback from the internally selected "peer reviewers," the fact remains that FARMS has miserably failed the most important peer review of all.
All that said, I do admit that I performed this search rather quickly, during the brief break I had in between my teaching assignments at Cassius. (My graduate seminar on Mopologetic Rhetoric and Theory does tend to leave me somewhat exhausted.) If I've neglected to look in the proper academic database, I hope that someone will set me straight. If not, though, it needs to be settled once and for all: the Review is not scholarship.
But let me sketch out my point in a bit more detail. Every undergraduate who learns how to do research is eventually tasked with the problem of determining whether or not a given text is "scholarly." E.g., is Time magazine "scholarly"? What about Nature? How about the New Yorker? For the uninitiated, this can be difficult to ascertain. Beginning writers are often advised to look at certain features of the text, and to ask certain questions: Was it written by a professor, or someone with a Ph.D. (i.e., an expert)? Does it have the citation features of scholarly writing (a bibliography, and either parentheticals or footnotes)? Was it published by a university press, or by an organization associated with a university? Were the articles therein peer reviewed?
Obviously, most of these are both essential to the process of good scholarship, and convenient ways of dressing up twaddle to look like legitimate academic writing. If you can "fake" the above elements, you stand a good chance of being able to dupe a good chunk of the populace into thinking your "scholarship" is legitimate. This clearly presents a problem with respect to the FARMS Review, since it contains all of the surface features of scholarly writing, and it (allegedly) uses a legitimate peer review process.
In the past, I have suggested that the Review has a "modified" peer review process that differs in substantive ways from the sort of legitimate process that takes place at respectable and genuinely academic publications. I have said that, if the articles in the FARMS Review were 100% scholarly, then there would be no need to fear that they'd face rejection in the market place of ideas. Sadly, this is precisely what has happened.
I mentioned out the outset of this post that I had a few free moments today, and so I took advantage of this to peruse a few of the academic search engines that allow one to access full-text articles, abstracts, and so on in literally hundreds--perhaps thousands--of online scholarly databases. So I went ahead and began searching for the FARMS Review in these databases, and I perused the results. Ladies and gentlemen, I must tell you that I did not find a single entry for the Reveiwamong any of the entries! Not in ProQuest; not in JSTOR; not in ATLA Religious Index. What is going on here? Am I simply looking in the wrong place?
The reality seems to be that the Great and Spacious building known as "The Academy" does not view the work in the Review as legitimate scholarship. I really cannot how significant it is that the Review absent from these databases. Librarians world wide make a very concerted effort to make sure that *all* scholarly journals get archived in these online indexes. Let me say that again, in all caps: LIBRARIANS WORLD-WIDE WANT TO ARCHIVE *ALL* SCHOLARLY JOURNALS IN THESE INDEXES. Thus, the absence of the Review from these lists is a huge countering smack-down against the claim that the Review is anything more than a smear fest.
I can already sense that some Droopy type is going to exclaim, "Well, the academy is biased against religion in general, and against Mormonism in particular!" To which I say: it ain't so. A simple search for "farms review" on ProQuest Religion pulls up hits for Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought, along with entries for the Journal of the Evangelical Theology Society and the Trinity Journal (this last was an article written by our old pals, Carl Mosser and Paul Owen).
In any case, this is remarkable, I hope it will at last demonstrate to critics and TBMs alike that the Review has no stature whatsoever in the larger academic, library indexing, and research communities. While the *actual* scholarly work of people like John Sorenson, Louis Midgley, and John Gee might have traction in the real work, it must be pointed out yet again that the stuff in the Review simply isn't real scholarship. Even if the FARMS editor gets positive feedback from the internally selected "peer reviewers," the fact remains that FARMS has miserably failed the most important peer review of all.
All that said, I do admit that I performed this search rather quickly, during the brief break I had in between my teaching assignments at Cassius. (My graduate seminar on Mopologetic Rhetoric and Theory does tend to leave me somewhat exhausted.) If I've neglected to look in the proper academic database, I hope that someone will set me straight. If not, though, it needs to be settled once and for all: the Review is not scholarship.